Colonel (ret.) Viktorie Ivancová

* 1923

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I never thought I would make it to the end of the War

Viktorie Ivancová
Viktorie Ivancová
photo: Archiv - Pamět národa

 Viktorie Ivancová was born in 1923 in Luck at Volyň. At that time, Volyň used to be a part of Poland. However, according to the Molotov - Ribbentrop pact, the area was annexed by the USSR at the beginning of the War. Mrs. Ivancová’s father was a Russian, and Russian was the most commonly used language in the family. Thus, she had no trouble finding a job under the new political circumstances, and spent some time working as a secretary for the Soviets. The breaking point in her life is meeting her first husband, who came to Volyň along with the 1st Czech independent brigade in the USSR under the command of general Svoboda. Mrs. Ivancová joined the army and married her husband there. The marriage was short and ended tragically. Her husband was killed at the border of Czechoslovakia during the Dukla operation. Mrs. Ivancová stayed in the army, working as a technician. At the end of the War she discovered about her brothers imprisonment in Auschwitz, where they later met. Viktorie Ivancová actively participated on liberating Ostrava, and later settled down in the area.