The boys’ expedition ended up in the People’s Court
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Vladimír Suk was born on 5 November 1942 in Tábor. His father Jaroslav Suk and mother Růžena, née Pešková, ran a shop in Neustupov. His mother’s widowed sister, whose husband perished in Auschwitz, also lived with the family. His father’s shop was nationalised after 1948, but Jaroslav Suk continued to run it as an employee of the Jednota cooperative. During the summer holidays of 1957, Vladimír Suk and other boys from Neustupov took part in a night expedition to the nearby pioneer camp near Jankov, where they intended to steal a flag in the manner of the Scout adventures. However, this was a camp of the Ministry of the Interior, the leaders reported their action to the Public Security and the expedition was investigated as an “attack” with political overtones. The case ended up in court. The two oldest of the boys, Antonín Holubovský and Miroslav Javorský, were give sentences of six and five months in prison. The others ended up with suspended sentences. Vladimir was not tried because he was not yet fifteen years old in the summer of 1957. He graduated from eleven years of school and after graduating from high school, he became a locksmith in Škoda in Plzeň. He worked at ČKD in Prague, where he also worked after his basic military service. From 1969 to 1972 he worked at ČKD Dukla and then at Armabeton. With his wife he had two daughters (born in 1972 and 1974), whom he brought up alone for a large part of their childhood, as he was widowed in 1981.