Freedom isn’t forever, it’s a long journey of personal choices
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Ivanka Fišerová was born on 13 February 1947 in Prague. Her father was Jiří Fišer, an electrical engineer and radio mechanic, later a technician at Czechoslovak Television. Her mother was Vlasta Fišerová, a graduate of a horticultural school. She had two younger siblings. Her uncle Josef Chaloupka was executed in Prague-Kobylisy on 6 June 1942 for allegedly approving the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich. Her father was forced to work in Berlin, Vienna and Prague during the Nazi occupation. From the early days of Czechoslovak Television, he was involved in broadcasting as a technician. Ivanka Fischerová started primary school in Střešovice in 1953, then graduated from the Secondary General Education School (SVVŠ) - today’s Kepler Grammar School. After graduating in 1965, she entered the University of Chemical Technology in Prague, but did not complete her studies. She worked at Czechoslovak Television as a sound assistant. She married Jan Vopelák, a FAMU student, and gave birth to her first child two months before the occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact troops in 1968. In the 1970s, she divorced and changed career direction. She worked as the director of the Antonín Dvořák Memorial in Vysoká near Příbram, and later as the administrator of the Hořovice Chateau. In 1982, she joined the monument care in the South Moravian Region. First at Bučovice Castle, then in Náměšt’ nad Oslavou as deputy administrator. She completed a two-year long-distance study at the State Institute of Heritage Care for castle managers. In April 1989 she returned to Prague and worked at the Institute of Housing and Clothing Culture as head of the secretariat. During November 1989 she was actively involved in supporting the Velvet Revolution, participating in demonstrations on Wenceslas Square and taking part in the adoption of a resolution in support of changes in her company. Since 1993, she has served as head of the Secretariat of the Religious Society of Czech Unitarians. In 2003-2005 she completed her Master of Theology studies in Chicago and after her return she worked as a clergyman. After 2022 she was involved in helping Ukrainian refugees in Sedlčany in connection with the war in Ukraine. She has been married twice and is the mother of three children. In 2026 she lived in Sedlčany.