They didn‘t want me in education because of the background materials
Jana Froňková, b. Běhalová, was born on July 5, 1950 in Prague to the family of Květa and Rostislav Běhal. Her mother was an official at the Presidium of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, her father was a program director of the Czechoslovak Radio. Jana graduated from grammar school in 1968 and then joined Pragoexport, a foreign trade company, as an administrative force. In 1968, she applied to the Communist Party to support reform communists seeking so-called socialism with a human face. At the time of the invasion of the Warsaw Pact troops, she witnessed a night shooting in Na Poříčí Street. Her sister emigrated in 1969. During political checks in the early 1970s, she was expelled from the Communist Party and almost lost her job. After the birth of her daughter with a mental disability, she wanted to work in kindergarten, but for political reasons they refused to accept her into education. Only thanks to her acquaintances did she find a job as a night educator in a kindergarten with a week-long operation in Španělská Street, and after completing a professional follow-up study, she started working as a teacher there. She still works in the kindergarten.