Hana Hladíková

* 1946

  • "You had to apply for a visit, they allowed it once every quarter or so. We lived far away and the service was poor, so they scheduled our visit at 7 am, so we took the trip at night. I remember spending hours at the station in Nezamyslice at night, then arriving in Mohelnice in the morning where there was a decent innkeeper who had already opened the pub and was making tea. Then it was up the bridleway past the castle, and there was some gloomy waiting room with other people. Then we were pushed into a room where there were these boxes. They pushed us up against one of them, and on the other side of the box they put dad in an ugly uniform. There was a partition between us, like at the post office, a grill and a small window, likely glass, and one without glass with a grill. I was six or seven years old. I don't know if the visit was long or short, I just remember the environment. It was quite depressing. Mum kept saying, 'Say something to dad!' And I couldn't get a syllable out. So I don't know what the poor guy was thinking."

  • "She came home from court devastated because my father was sentenced to fifteen years, loss of property and civil rights, and a fine. Most importantly, mum couldn't recognise dad when they brought him in... It's not far from here. She said they pushed in an old man she didn't recognize. Daddy was a big man but he lost about 50 kilos there."

  • "I was in fourth grade, running down the stairs at school, and I ran into the principal who we were all afraid of. He just gently pushed me away because he already knew. My mum used to work in the school canteen and she had to go ask him for time off. She'd got a telegram, so he already knew, but I didn't. I used to go to my aunt's from school, and she knew too. Then I went home; I guess my sister was probably still in school, I was home alone. Suddenly the door opened and my mom and dad came in and I jumped around his neck. I remember that. And I don't know, maybe that very night, maybe the next night dad was already tuning into Radio Free Europe."

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    Jihlava, 08.09.2025

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My daddy went to prison when I was six

Hana Hladíková during the filming for Memory of Nation, 8 September 2025, Jihlava
Hana Hladíková during the filming for Memory of Nation, 8 September 2025, Jihlava
photo: Memory of Nation

Hana Hladíková was born in Nové Město na Moravě on 10 December 1946. Her parents Karel Hladík and Anna Hladíková owned a mill in the village of Polnička. Her father was sentenced in 1952 in a mock trial to fifteen years in prison, forfeiture of property and a penalty for treason. He was blind. He was eventually released in 1956. As a child, Hana made visits to the Mírov Prison, where he was serving. Due to her father’s past, she had problems getting into high school, eventually completing a farming high school in Telč, majoring in economics. Having graduated in 1966, took an accountant job at the local coop farm in Polnička. In Polnička, she also witnessed the invasion of Warsaw Pact troops in 1968 and the developments of 1989. She was still living there at the time of filming in 2025.