The Soviet Union is occupying us, we should defend ourselves
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Jiří Valášek was born in Lubná near Rakovník on 31 March 1931. His father was a miner, his mother a housewife. They lived in a sublet; he shared a bed with his siblings. He liked sports since childhood, running and playing ice hockey. As a boy, he saw the occupation of the Czechoslovak borderland in 1938. The break-up of the country hit him hard. The Rakovník region was full of borderland refugees. The Red Army liberated Lubná at the end of the war. All of that played a part in his joining the Communist Party and the military. Emil Zátopek inspired him to enlist. The party used the promising Olympian to promote its plans. Zátopek told young people of the athletic opportunities that joining the army would give them. Jiří Valášek signed up and got into the school in Český Těšín. He fell in love with a local girl. They married in 1956. After graduation, he was allowed to choose his station. He went to Šumava. He continued to play hockey alongside his military service, in Vimperk and then in Kašperské Hory where he moved in 1967 as the commander of the Kašperské Hory garrison of 400 men. On 21 August 1968, he refused to allow Warsaw Pact tanks into the town. He was reprimanded with a warning. Transfer to a military seismological station saved him from dismissal. From deep within the Šumava Mountains, they monitored nuclear tests all over the world. His last military position was the commander of the Dobrá Voda region. The first thing he did there was clean up the local cemetery and church. He and his wife raised two children and welcomed grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. They celebrated 68 years since their wedding in 2024. At the time of filming in 2024, Jiří Valášek lived in Kašperské Hory.