My parents never learned Czech
Anna Hladká was born on 11 June 1932 in the village of Nová Ves (in German Neudorf, since 1961, a settlement of Dolní Moravice). Her parents Gustav and Frieda Riedel were, like the vast majority of people in this region, of German nationality. Her family was one of the few who did not have to join the German deportation in 1946. They did not escape eviction, however, and two years later, they were loaded onto a truck and taken to the Uničov region, where they had to work in agriculture for two years. When they returned, their house had a different owner, so they were given emergency accommodation in the neighbouring village of Malá Morávka. Anna then worked in the local sawmill. When the sawmill was closed after two years, Anna joined a ladder factory in Malé Morávka, where she met her future husband Josef. The couple then moved to Dolní Moravice. They raised their two daughters, Anna and Olga, there and lived together for forty years until the husband‘s death. In 2020, Anna Hladká still lived in Dolní Moravice.