Narratives of Czechoslovak Prison Staff from the Communist Era (original) (raw)
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The article contributes to the historiography of the Czechoslovak communist dictatorship. The Communist takeover and stabilization of the regime were connected with various kinds of oppression including political trials. The biggest political trial in that time was that with the female politician Milada Horáková and the twelve members of her resistance group. This trial was followed by dozens of smaller local trials around the country, accusing 627 people altogether. While the main trial was carried publicly and was used extensively in the state’s propaganda, the local trials remain almost forgotten and outside the interest of Czech public. This paper will focus on one of them and its impact on my narrator and his family. Antonín Městecký jr. was a child when his father Antonín Městecký was imprisoned for 11 years after a local show trial in the city of Hradec Králové in East Bohemia. The imprisonment of his father was his strongest childhood experience; when his father returned home, the son was already an adult and they both kept silent about the traumatic past. They never discussed what really happened in the time of the father’s imprisonment, creating a severe trauma for the son. How can the turning point in someone’s life be remembered if we have only limited information? Using the methods of oral history, this paper explores how Mr. Městecký tries to deal with this gap in his family’s history by extending his childhood memories with information told to him by members of his father’s resistance group or found in books and archives. In the methodology, I will also reflect on how sharing his story with me constituted bridging the gap. His narrative contains rich accounts of life and survival as well as interesting moments and silences, revealing the complexities of trauma narratives and their effect on the descendants of former political prisoners.
In the post-war Poland, official Marxist ideology dominates according to which crime is strongly associated with capitalism and has no place in a society where so-called class conflict was eliminated. Crime in such political conditions was seen as a primitive form of resistance and, therefore, was given a political nature. Common criminal proliferated to the rank of a rebel against whom severe criminal repressions appropriate to the enemies of the political system were used. In such ideological conditions in Poland, the first prison in which a specific pedagogical experiment was conducted appears, and the organization of which is a strong part of the development of the penitentiary education. Juvenile Correctional Facility in Jaworzno operated from 1951 to 1956. Theoretical sources of the activity lay in the prison resocialization system of Antoni S. Makarenko. Unfortunately, the post-war origins of this field of knowledge and practice is the dark spot on education which will langui...