Mgr. Václav Diviš

* 1944

  • "We saw where State Security was going after they seized the documents. They just wanted to use me to start contacts with the International Community [of Married Priests]. Unfortunately, I have to admit that I did it out of weakness and out of fear for my family. But then I told my wife that night and immediately thought, 'I'd rather go to jail than live with this. And I can't live with this.' But the next day we had a meeting that was set up in advance - they were the ones who knew about it and wanted it to go ahead. I was just in this meeting - we were about three [or] four people - I was just saying, 'This is what happened. What's next? I better make this decision...' But they [said], 'No, that would totally destroy you and the whole family, because they have the power here. What we're going to do is we're going to kind of play it out. Or how should I put it... We're just going to sort of keep going."

  • "Everybody stood up and the chant St. Wenceslas was sung. The organ was playing. The chant reverberated and [the] first and main speaker, the minister, Dr. Josef Plojhar, took the floor. I must say that he could talk. He talked for four hours about what a journey we have come as a society, how it is the right order and all that kind of talk. And that we have actually joined this current, how it is actually socially correct. He listed all the virtues of the health care system when he was at the head of [it]... And so on. He was going through the, - I guess, the church political situation and all that, - he was just touting it, and it went on for four hours. Then there was a big applause. And I [wondered] how it was possible that these priests, - after all, they are intelligent, - applauded it so much... Well, but it was like that. Then there was lunch, of course, delicious. I don't even know if it was sirloin steak... Just a good lunch and dessert. And then there was a break, and during that break, there was walking in the foyer. I went to the toilet, and now I see my classmate Tonda Kolář standing there with some guy in black, talking to him. I thought it was a good friend of his. So I came closer and he immediately addressed [us] in Slovak: 'So how, boys, how do you like it?' Well, you know… ' Speech is silver, silence is golden' - especially back then. But I said, 'Honestly, apart from the Saint Wenceslas chorale and that excellent lunch, it was crap.'"

  • "I came to about the sixth grade, and the whole class - even though Písek was a communist town - was all white shirts, red scarves. There were about three of us without red scarves. I was sitting in the first or second desk, I don't know now, and the comrade teacher Böhmová said: 'Boy, why aren't you in the Pioneer? And I was always used to saying things truthfully from home, so I said: 'I'm not in the Pioneer because I don't want to be a communist.' [And she said:] 'Oh no, a Pioneer is a model pupil, he studies well, he helps his classmates, you know?' Anyway, I said: 'I don't want to be a pioneer because I don't want to be a unionist and I don't want to be a communist!' So the class ended, the first day, very briefly, and immediately the class teacher, Comrade Teacher Böhm, took me to the headmistress's office: 'So tell me, boy, here, Comrade Headmaster, what you said.' It was kind of my first lesson. So I repeated it. The director just shook his head and then I had it in my papers with a note: only to JZD."

  • Full recordings
  • 1

    Plzeň, 14.02.2022

    (audio)
    duration: 01:41:53
    media recorded in project Příběhy regionu - PLZ REG ED
  • 2

    Plzeň, 13.12.2022

    (audio)
    duration: 02:22:23
    media recorded in project Příběhy regionu - PLZ REG ED
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Dad said to mom, ‘The child that is born will be a priest. The Lord God has plans for him’.

Václav Diviš was ordained in the Cathedral of St. Stephen in Litoměřice, June 25,1967
Václav Diviš was ordained in the Cathedral of St. Stephen in Litoměřice, June 25,1967
photo: Archive of the witness

Václav Diviš was born after the death of his father on June 10, 1944 in Radotín near Prague to Jaroslava Divišová, née Nešvarová. The mother moved to Příbram with her daughter Maria and son Václav. In 1945, they moved to the village of Svatá Maří near Vimperk, where mom ran the household for father Josef Schreier. They followed the father to Myšenec, then in 1952 to Čížová, then to Nepomuk. Václav Diviš was not allowed to study theology, so he started working at the Geodetic Topographic Institute. In 1962 he finally entered the Roman Catholic Cyril and Methodius Theological Faculty in Litoměřice. He began his priestly service in Týn nad Vltavou, and after six months of military service in Domažlice, he started as an assistant priest in Sušice. From 1968 he also led the Wolf Cubs in Scouting there, but because of his work in Scouting and his clerical activities he was monitored by State Security. Suspecting that his state approval would be withdrawn, he terminated his employment and changed many jobs. He worked as an auxiliary worker, a boatman at the dam, a stoker at ČSAD and an ambulance driver. In February 1977, he signed Charter 77. In 1978, he graduated from medical school at night and started working as a nurse in the operating theatre in Motol. In 1979 he married Maria Šebestová. In 1985, under pressure from the State Security - out of fear for his family - he signed a cooperation agreement, but he went to work in a calf farm in Šumava to be out of reach. Together with others he founded the Civic Forum in Hartmanice. He studied German at the Faculty of Education in Prague. After 1989 he taught at primary and secondary schools. He co-founded scout troops and an amateur theatre in Hartmanice. From 2006-2016 he was the director of the synagogue in Hartmanice. At the time of the filming in 2022, he lived with his wife Margita in Sušice, where he is still involved in theatre.