Dolní Kralovice
zatopená obec · Želivka, Česká republika
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Only four came back

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Dagmar Hanzlová spent the war years in the now flooded village of Dolní Kralovice. Before the war, a large Jewish community lived in the village. She recalls that before the local Jews were deported to Theresienstadt in 1942, her father gave some water to their Jewish neighbor Hugo Schwarc. After this was revealed to the Nazis by their neighbors, they nearly ended up in a Nazi prison. Her father was hiding foodstuff and other things that belonged to a friend of him in the attic. These provisions were supposed to be handed over to the authorities serving the war needs of the Reich. “The Gestapo came to search our place. In our attic, there were about twelve quintals of grain, cloth, an iron pot full of lard, a fifty-kilo box of sugar cubes. We would have gone to jail for that, the whole family. We had an advantage because my mother spoke perfect German. That was a huge plus already. One of the older Gestapo agents noticed that my dad had an amputated leg and he asked him where he had lost it. My father told him that he had fought at the Masurian lakes in Poland. The Gestapo man said: ‘me too’. And that was it. There was no search. They left and saluted my father.” Dagmar Hanzlová remembers other Jewish families from Dolní Kralovice. For example the Bauers, whose sons died while trying to escape across the border. Their parents came to say goodbye to them just before the transport to Theresienstadt. None of them has ever returned from the concentration camps. “Their parents had a shop with artificial flowers and they were really good people. They came to say goodbye to my mother and they said: ‘we know that we’ll never see you again’. They were right.” Dagmar Hanzlová likes to remember her fellow Jewish citizens from Dolní Kralovice. Of those 147 deported to Theresienstadt, only four reportedly came back after the war.

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Dagmar Hanzlová

Dagmar Hanzlová

Dagmar Hanzlová, née Štoková, was born in 1924 in Prague. At the age of 6, her family moved to Dolní Kralovice in the Vysočina region, where Dagmar spent her childhood and youth. She thus witnessed the sad fate of the Jewish community living in the region. Most of the Jews were deported to Nazi concentration camps where they lost their lives. In 1944 she managed to evade a transfer to forced labor in Germany by feigning illness. Instead of having to work as a slave laborer in the Reich, she was placed in the kitchen of an underground factory in Dolní Loučky nearby Tišnov which produced the fuselage and engines for the fighter plane Messerschmitt Me 109. In 1946, Mrs. Dagmar married Vlastimil Hanzl, who took part in the Battle for France as the soldier of the 1st telegraphic battalion of the Czechoslovak foreign army in 1940. In the course of one of the campaigns, he was injured and captured by the Germans. However, he managed to escape from the POW camp and made it to his sister’s place in Dolní Kralovice, where he went into hiding for some time and where he also met his future wife. After the end of the war, they moved together to Opava. The town of her youth, Dolní Kralovice, had to make way to the construction of the Švihov water dam which was built on the Želivka River.

Dolní Kralovice

Available in: English | Česky

První písemná zmínka o Dolních Kralovicích pochází z konce 12. století. Významným mezníkem pro obec byl rok 1850, kdy se po zrušení nevolnictví stala sídlem soudního okresu spadajícího pod politický okres Ledeč nad Sázavou. Před druhou světovou válkou žilo v obci více než 1300 obyvatel a nacházela se v ní poměrně silná židovská komunita. V červnu 1942 ale bylo 147 místních Židů deportováno do Terezína a z koncentračních táborů se po válce údajně vrátili jen čtyři. Místní synagogu po válce změnili na modlitebnu Československé církve husitské. Na počátku šedesátých let bylo rozhodnuto o vybudování vodní nádrže Švihov na řece Želivce – zdroje pitné vody pro středočeskou oblast a Prahu, která měla mimo jiné stát na území Dolních Kralovic. V letech 1972–1974 tak byla většina místních domů zbourána. Náhrobky z židovského hřbitova byly převezeny na jeden z nejstarších židovských hřbitovů v Evropě do Trhového Štěpánova. Z celé obce se zachoval jen jeden dům a stodola stojící mimo zátopovou oblast nádrže. Jako náhrada původních Dolních Kralovic byly v letech 1969–1974 vystavěny nové Dolní Kralovice, kam se přestěhovala velká část obyvatel původní obce.

Dolní Kralovice

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