“How could anyone take our land?” my father wondered
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Jaromír Procházka was born on 27 April 1937 in Kutná Hora to Amálie and Gustav Procházka. His parents had a farm with about 80 hectares of land in Neškaredice (today part of Kutná Hora). During the World War II, the family secretly helped people from the cities who did not have such easy access to money in kind. At the end of World War II, a Soviet officer lived with the Procházkas and stole their property. After 1948, his stepfather Jan Vosečka refused to join a Cooperative Farm (JZD). He spent the next two years in the uranium mines in Jáchymov. The family was evicted from the farm and almost all their property was taken away. As the stepson of a kulak, Jaromír Procházka had trouble getting into secondary school. He could only apprentice as a miner in Příbram. After finishing his apprenticeship, he joined the mines in Kutná Hora at Kaňk, and later he also worked in the mines in Kladno. In 1964 and 1965 he repeatedly tried to get admission to Film and TV School of Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU). Finally, he was accepted to study artistic photography at the Prague Conservatory. During the invasion of the Warsaw Pact troops, he documented the events in Kutná Hora photographically and found himself in a dramatic situation. In the following years he became a professional photographer in the Kutná Hora district and captured many other key moments. He worked for the media and other businesses. He captured the events during the general strike in 1989. In 2025 he was living in Kutná Hora.