Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

I Admire My Mother

My mother celebrated her birthday on 26 August every year until her untimely passing in 1992. It wasn’t the day of her birth, but rather the day she believed her spirit was born. On that day in 1968, a young, British Special Opps soldier risked his life and his career to smuggle the young girl who would become my mother out of Prague. Along with my Great Aunt, whom she never knew, she was one half of the last living vestige of a great diplomatic family. Her parents, brother and two sisters lost their lives at the hands of persons unknown earlier that same week.

Mum spent the next fourteen years in care in England, first in an orphanage and then with a lovely foster family. The young soldier who had rescued her never forgot her, making sure she was well looked after and visiting from time to time. I was born in 1984 when Mum was twenty; Dad had just been decommissioned from the SAS.

This week is the fiftieth anniversary of the Prague Spring and the rout of my maternal family. I grieve when I hear modern historians reinterpreting those times as a minor spat between rival communist factions. I hope that in my life’s work, I represent a more fitting memorial to brave people who wanted to give more to the citizens of their country at a time when the Soviet Bear loomed large over Europe.
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
PeterTheTherapist · 61-69, M
I have very close friends in the Prague area, and I know what the events in those days meant to their family.
In fact, as I write these lines, the clock is approaching 11 pm on the 20. August here in Denmark, where I am, as well as in Czech Republic - and 11 pm on August 20. 1968 was the time, when tanks from the Sovjet Union and other Warza Pact countries started rolling across the border to Czechoslovakia, thus suffocating the Prague Spring.
May those who gave their lives in those hours and days 50 years ago never be forgotten - and may heroes like the ones you describe, Claudia, never be forgotten either!