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2RHPZ
07-09-2004, 05:13 PM
Wartime hero and inventor Josef Balejka dies

[08-07-2004] By David Vaughan

One of the Czech legends of the Battle of Britain, Josef Balejka died on Wednesday at the age of 87. As a pilot he served throughout the war, after an extraordinary escape to England. David Vaughan looks back at the life of an exceptional man who knew both adventure and tragedy.

Josef Balejka died in his beloved home town of Valasske Klobouky in the rolling hills on the Czech-Slovak border. Before the war he was one of just a few hundred Czechoslovak pilots trained to fly the most up-to-date fighter planes. When Hitler occupied the Czech Lands in March 1939, Balejka escaped to Poland with three of his fellow pilots, determined to fight for their homeland. He described his departure as the only "romantic escape from Czechoslovakia", because he had got across the border guided by a young girl, and they fooled the border patrols by pretending to be lovers.
When Poland fell, the four men escaped, along with a Polish general, to Romania, then on to Beirut, to France, and eventually to England. Because of their link to Poland, they joined the 303 Polish fighter squadron. Zdenek Zvonek has made a documentary film about Balejka:

"They were four friends, who had all escaped together - one of them was Frantisek Josef, one of most famous of all Battle of Britain pilots, who shot down 17 planes in three weeks. But in the end, Balejka was the only one to survive. To the end of his life, he would always ask: why was it me, and not they that survived?"
After the war, Josef Balejka returned home with his English wife, but he left again with the communist take-over of 1948, spending the next forty years in Britain and Latin America. He moved back to Valasske Kloubouky at the time of "perestroika", when the borders began to open, and for the last fifteen years of his life, he was amazingly active in serving his local community. He was also a passionate inventor, as Zdenek Zvonek remembers:
"One thing I remember he invented was a kind of scooter or skateboard that you could put under the wheel of your car if you had a puncture. It was a very simple idea, and one of - I think - over 70 patents that he had to his name. He was even given an award by the British Trade and Industry Minister for his inventions."
Josef Balejka - pilot, war-hero and inventor - will be remembered as one of the last of an extraordinary generation of Czech patriots.

http://img.radio.cz/pictures/lidi/balejka_josef.jpg

http://img.radio.cz/pictures/lidi/balejka_josef1.jpg

2RHPZ
07-09-2004, 05:15 PM
Not only heroes were among Czech pilots in UK:


The incredible story of the Czech spy who stole an RAF plane for the Nazis

While thousands of Czechs fought bravely for the Royal Air Force during World War II, the British media has recently carried reports about one Czech pilot who was far from a hero. Augustin Preucil was a Nazi spy who managed to infiltrate the RAF before stealing one of their war planes for the Germans.

Preucil's story is a remarkable one. Born near Benesov in central Bohemia, in 1939 he was caught attempting to illegally cross the border from the Nazi Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, on his way to offer his services as a pilot in South America. Military historian Jiri Rajlich takes up the story.
"In exchange for being pardoned he entered the service of the Gestapo, who sent him abroad. His mission was to monitor goings on in Czechoslovak military circles abroad, and the air forces in particular."
After spells in Poland and France, Preucil made his way to Britain where he joined the Royal Air Force and pulled off what is believed to have been a unique crime - he stole a Hurricane plane (having feigned crashing in the sea) and delivered it to his Nazi handlers. Indeed it was the discovery of a photo of the fighter plane in Berlin in 1941 that recently brought the story to attention in the UK. But that daring theft wasn't the end of Antonin Preucil's treachery.
"Until the end of the war he was an agent, a provocateur whose task was to infiltrate resistance fighters. Among other tasks, he was sent into the Gestapo prison Terezin as a spy. He also spied on American pilots who had been caught. In 1944 he helped the Prague Gestapo to identify Czechoslovak pilots who had been shot down over Germany and who the Nazis wanted to try as traitors."
With the liberation of Czechoslovakia a year later the tables were turned, however, and it Augustin Preucil's own turn to stand trial for treason. Jiri Rajlich again.
"He wasn't very careful and just before the end of the war some members of the resistance had their suspicions about him. In May 1945, not long after liberation, he was arrested. He was brought before a military court, was found guilty of treason and executed on April 14, 1947."

mack pl
07-09-2004, 05:15 PM
Josef Balejka :


RIP :(


great man.

oldsoak
07-10-2004, 06:09 PM
Top bloke - RIP :(