Ostrava, Čapek’s Sokol house
Sokolská třída 2689/48, 702 00 Ostrava-Moravská Ostrava a Přívoz, Czech Republic
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It was a farce

Available in: English | Česky

At the end of July in 1950, Zdeněk Růžička appeared before a court in a trial that was taking place in Čapek’s Sokol house in Moravská Ostrava. It was a trial trumped up by the Communists and called “Jan Buchal and associates.” As the number of the accused was rather high, they were separated into four groups. Zdeněk Růžička was included in the group “Pěgřimek Emil and associates.” The trial with the members of this group lasted three days and at the end of it, 18 men and 3 women were sentenced to long prison terms. Zdeněk Růžička was hardly aware of the course of the trial as he suffering from jaundice, was severely malnourished and had bruises all over his face. The bruises were the result of the beating he had been subjected to by his interrogators. The beating led to a serious teeth inflammation. His face was swollen and he suffered from a terrible headache: “As I was supposed to go to the court, my face became swollen and I had a terrible headache. I could barely see. When they came for us, one of the StB officers asked me what had happened to me. He said that I looked as if somebody had beaten me. I didn’t say anything and just watched what was happening in the court. It was a farce. There was an old woman, probably the judge, who looked like she had just walked out of a brothel. She was wearing black stockings and was heavily made up. She behaved very informally, sitting for instance on a table with her legs crossed like if she was sitting in a bar. I could see how some of the accused were trying to convince the court of their innocence and that they were hammered for it. My head was droning and I feared that I might not last the trial. Then they called me up. I told them that everything was the way it had been noted in the protocol. That was it. Later, I learned that I had been the only one who repentantly confessed. So they turned around everything in a way to make it suit them," Zdeněk Růžička recalls about this farce, which brought him 14 years of imprisonment.

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The trial with Buchal and associates

The trial with Buchal and associates

After February 1948, the former police constable Jan Buchal began to plan illegal activities against the Communist regime in the region of Ostravsko with the alleged aim of an armed overthrow of the regime. He joined forces with the resistance group of Vilém Vaculík, which, however, had been already infiltrated by StB agents. In an operation called Bezkyd, the StB ried to reveal as many people involved in illegal activities as possible. Jan Buchal and another 22 persons were arrested on October 25, 1949. Further waves of arrests followed resulting in dozens of people being arrested – often people who had little to do with the resistance group. The public trial with the group Jan Buchal and associates was held in the Čapek’s Sokol house in Moravská Ostrava on July 17 – 31, 1950. All in all, there were 90 defendants and thus it became the largest political process in the region of Ostravsko. Prior to the trial, all the defendants were subjected to brutal interrogations. As the number of the defendants was very high, the group was divided into four sub-groups. However, Jan Buchal himself was incorporated into a different trial with Milada Horáková and associates and executed in the Pankrác prison on July 27, 1950. The process in Čapek’s Sokol house led to five life imprisonments and even four capital punishments. Miroslav Sýkora, Miloš Morávek, Josef Polomský and Ladislav Ceé were executed in the premises of the regional court in Ostrava on August 1, 1951.

Ostrava, Čapek’s Sokol house

Available in: English | Česky

The architect Miloslav Kopřiva is the author of Čapek’s Sokol house which was inaugurated in 1932. It was named after a fallen official of the Sokol Jan Čapek and it served the needs of the Sokol in Moravská Ostrava. A number of local members of the Sokol were imprisoned by the Nazis as well as the Communists in the ensuing period. In 1948, the Sokol was officially banned by the Communist regime and the Sokol house was taken over by the state. At the end of July 1950, the Sokol house became the place of the trial with the group “Buchal and associates,” that was showcased to a meticulously selected audience. It became the largest trumped-up political process in the whole region of Ostravsko. In the present day, the Sokol house serves as the seat of the regional organization of the Sokol of Moravskoslezko.

Ostrava, Čapek’s Sokol house

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It was a farce

It was a farce

The trial with Buchal and…
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