I didn‘t understand as a child why these people had to leave
Monika Kreuzová, née Srbová, was born on 7 July 1942 in the Krásné Březno district of Ústí nad Labem. She came from a mixed marriage, her mother was German, her father Czech. Her parents tried to protect her from the horrors of the war, but after the war she witnessed the deportation of family friends. Although her mother also wanted to go to Germany, the Srbs stayed in Ústí nad Labem. Monika went to a German kindergarten. At primary school, which she entered in 1948, she learned Czech in half a year. Because of her nationality, she had to face insults and hostile behaviour. This stopped just when she had perfected her Czech so much that it was not noticeable that she had previously only spoken German. After primary school she studied to be a midwife and worked in the health sector until she retired. Her mother never learned Czech and later moved to Germany. Monika Kreuzová visited her in Germany and lived and worked in Munich for two years. She loved to travel, and after the Velvet Revolution new opportunities opened up for her and she travelled the world. In 2024, she lived in a home for the elderly in Bukov in Ústí nad Labem. The story of the witness could be recorded thanks to support from the city of Ústí nad Labem.