Dagmar Trojanová

* 1922

  • “We knew that Mr. Šrámek was to arrive and so we had prepared everything. We prepared to show a day in our camp: from getting up in the morning to the campfire in the evening when the day was coming to a close. We had prepared all of this and we showed him the entire day. Mr. Šrámek recorded it on camera and made a beautiful film out of it, and I still like it a lot and I’m moved by it whenever I see it.”

  • “We were going blueberry picking with the children and then cooking blueberry jam. We would always cook it for three days so that we would have enough jam for the pancakes for the children. The children loved it, they liked picking blueberries, because we would always take half a bowl from them and let them have the other half to eat. So we cooked like this…”

  • “When the Germans occupied us on March 15, I was just at home in Chrudim. At school they told us to go home, and warned us not to stop on the street and go straight home. At that time, the Germans were already riding though Chrudim and they were everywhere. One had such a strange feeling, almost fear, before one got used to it. On the first day, it was…as for me, I had such a horrible feeling of fear – uncertainty. One didn’t know what would happen next. And I was terrified by these Germans!”

  • Full recordings
  • 1

    Hlinsko, 03.05.2013

    (audio)
    duration: 56:05
    media recorded in project A Century of Boy Scouts
Full recordings are available only for logged users.

We were cooking the blueberry jam for three days in order to have enough for the pancakes for the children

trojanova dobovy orez.jpg (historic)
Dagmar Trojanová
photo: Archiv Vojtěcha Homolky

  Dagmar Trojanová was born July 25, 1922 in Hlinsko. Her father Karel Nevole was a manager of a sawmill at that time, and later he began trading in wood and coal. Her mother was a housewife. Their second daughter Jana was born in 1928. Jana later studied pharmacy and worked in a pharmacy in Hlinsko. Until the outbreak of WWII, both sisters enjoyed wonderful carefree childhood, which was also filled with Scout camps and exercising in Sokol. Dagmar Trojanová graduated from Secondary Special School for Girls’ Jobs in Chrudim. Her father employed her in his business during the war. After her father’s death, Dagmar and her mom began working as managers of this family business, but it was confiscated after the communists came to power. Dagmar afterwards worked in a coal depot and in the textile company Plyšan, where she remained until her retirement. Dagmar Trojanová has one daughter, who used to work as a librarian in the Municipal Library in Hlinsko, one granddaughter and one great-grandson.