My father hid from communist imprisonment for five years in the attic
Jaroslav Pleva was born on 6 November 1939. His parents at that time owned the company Sběrné suroviny (a scrapyard) in Hradec Králové. The family lived in a small house on the premises of the scrapyard. Sběrné suroviny prospered until 1948, when the communists nationalized the company. The witness’s father was then accused of stealing national property. He spent several months in custody. Later, the court changed his initially short sentence to two years in prison and a heavy fine. His father did not want to serve the sentence and hid at home from 1951 to 1956. This fact deeply affected the life of the whole family, including Jaroslav Pleva; not only at that time, but also throughout the entire duration of the communist regime. The witness wanted to study civil engineering, but because his father was inconvenient person to the regime, he was not admitted to the school. After completeing his militar service, while working, he managed to finish the evening construction technical school and graduated from this secondary school. After graduation he was promoted and headed the construction department in Texlen Trutnov. In the following years he had several jobs and worked for twenty-four years as head of the investment department at the Krkonoše National Park Administration. He refused offers to join the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. In 1966 he married and he and his wife raised two children. In 2023 he was living in Vrchlabí. We were able to record his story thanks to support from the ŠKODA AUTO Foundation.