Josefina ŠPIČKOVÁ

Josefina ŠPIČKOVÁ

Žena 1841 - 1916  (74 let)

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Generace: 1

  1. 1.  Josefina ŠPIČKOVÁJosefina ŠPIČKOVÁ se narodil(a) 11 Listopad 1841; zemřel(a) 28 Duben 1916.

    Poznámky:

    «b»Josefina ŠPIČKOVÁ «/b»-
    rests in a tomb at the parish cemetery in Plasy along with her son «b»MUDr Hilar [I] «/b».
    Hilar [I]'s father died early, leaving the little boy orphaned at young age. Hilar [I] had a sister, who worked in a bank.

    Josefina — ŠPIČKA. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 2. Hilar (i) ŠPIČKA, MUDr  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 30 Prosinec 1873, Bohuňov, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 15 Červenec 1921, Plasy, Czech Rep..
    2. 3. Xyz ŠPIČKOVÁ, - bankovní úřednice  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa
    3. 4. František ŠPIČKA, - priest at Hustopeč  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa


Generace: 2

  1. 2.  Hilar (i) ŠPIČKA, MUDrHilar (i) ŠPIČKA, MUDr Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (1.Josefina1) se narodil(a) 30 Prosinec 1873, Bohuňov, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 15 Červenec 1921, Plasy, Czech Rep..

    Poznámky:

    «b»MUDr Hilar [I] ŠPIČKA«/b» -«i»
    «/i» was born in Bohu ov and died in Plasy. He married «b»Milada Holečková «/b» who was born and died in Plasy. They had two children: older «b»1) Marie (Mářa)
    «/b» and «b»2) Hilar [II]«/b» .
    MUDr Hilar [I] pi ka held a position of a personal physician of the Prince Metternich in Plasy, and his official title was "Physician by Appointment of H. H. Prince von Metternich, Chief Physician of the Town of Plasy, and Chief Physician of the Railroads". However, this lofty title betrayed the sober reality that he and his family lived quite frugally in a small apartment in the Plasy castle.
    «i» (According to the reminiscences of his son MUDr Hilar [II] pi ka passed on to in turn by his grandson Daniel pi ka)«/i» . Nonetheless, he could afford to buy in «i» 1913 «/i» a personal car manufactured by then quite renowned firm Laurin & Klement. Diana's cousin Vojt ch Palek shared with me an anecdote worth including in this account.
    With his coachman Mr. Urbánek at the wheel, as usual, while returning to Plasy from Plze on a wintry nigh the car collided with a farmer's cart. Luckily, Hilar [I] wore two fur coats to keep himself warm in an open roof-less car. As he was thrown out of the car, he suffered serious concussion but no other injuries. After the accident he sold the car to the chauffeur of Prince Metternich for 5,000 K, who immediately resold
    it to the Prince himself '96 for 25,000 K !
    During the WWI MUDr Hilar [I] pi ka remained stationed in Plasy as a Chief P hysician of the military hospital created in the convent0 .
    Hilar [I] had a brother «b»František«/b» , who was priest at Hustope near Brno, and held a
    position of a professor at the local secondary school (Gymnasium). At Christmas he often joined his brother's family in Plasy. Marie (Má a) pi ková reminisces in her memoir, that during his visits at Plasy he often took his nephew and his niece for long walks.
    A commemorative monument was constructed by his grateful parishioners and placed at the main road nearby.
    «u»«b»PLASY«/u»«/b»:
    Plasy is a small town with rich history located 25 km north of Plzeň (Pilsen) a beautiful countryside of forests, meadows and farmland. First historical record of Plasy with the foundation of a Cistercian monastery. In fact the history of Plasy is inseparable the history of the Cistercian monastery. Later, Plasy became domain of the powerful aristocratic family of Metternich '96 Czech prince Vladislav II (1140 '96 1171) the Cistercian order to establish a monastery in Plasy with a donation of Land holdings for Since the founding clerics came from Bavaria, the monastery had kept the German
    character. In 15th century it was burnt down by the Hussites during the pre-reformation Hussite . The town quickly lost its significance and marauding armies of foreigners in 1620 found the deserted.
    Rebuilding of the monastery and reconstruction of the town started only during the Counter-reformation backlash following the defeat of the Czech Protestant cause in 1921.
    Between 1661 and 1785 famous architects J. B. Mathey, J. B. Santini and K. I. Dientzenhofer lavishly rebuilt the monastery in a baroque style. In 1825 the monastery was closed and sold in auction by Joseph II, an enlightened and very practical Hapsburg monarch . In 1826 the fief of Plasy came into the ownership of the Prince von Metternich, who established in it his residence and set a family tomb here. The castle remained in the ownership of the Metternich House until 1945.
    («u»Source«/u»: «i»From Petr PETRIK: "«b»FAMILY CHRONICLE: Family of Diana Špičková«/b»" «/i»)

    Hilar — Milada HOLEČKOVÁ-ŠPIČKOVÁ. Milada (dcera od Ing. Josef (ii) HOLEČEK, - direktor, Plasy: Metternich-Winneberg panství a Anna KABÁTOVÁ-HOLEČKOVÁ) se narodil(a) 15 Říjen 1878, Plasy, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 2 Duben 1931, Plasy, Czech Rep.. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 5. Marie (Mářa) ŠPIČKOVÁ-PÁLKOVÁ  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa
    2. 6. MUDr Hilar (ii) ŠPIČKA  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 6 Červen 1903, Praha, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 8 Prosinec 1990, Praha, Czech Rep..

  2. 3.  Xyz ŠPIČKOVÁ, - bankovní úředniceXyz ŠPIČKOVÁ, - bankovní úřednice Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (1.Josefina1)

  3. 4.  František ŠPIČKA, - priest at HustopečFrantišek ŠPIČKA, - priest at Hustopeč Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (1.Josefina1)

    Poznámky:

    «b»František ŠPIČKA«/b» -
    was priest at Hustope near Brno, and held aposition of a professor at the local secondary school (Gymnasium). At Christmas he often joinedhis brother's (Hilar)family in Plasy. Marie (Má reminisces in her memoir, that during his
    visits at Plasy he often took his nephew and his niece for long walks.
    A commemorative monument was constructed by his grateful parishioners and placed at the main road nearby.



Generace: 3

  1. 5.  Marie (Mářa) ŠPIČKOVÁ-PÁLKOVÁMarie (Mářa) ŠPIČKOVÁ-PÁLKOVÁ Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (2.Hilar2, 1.Josefina1)

    Poznámky:

    «b»Marie ŠPIČKOVÁ-PÁLKOVÁ«/b» suffered of bipolar disease, which runs in Špička family . The Palkas had two sons:
    «b» A) Jiří «/b»«i» (August 6, 1934 - 1999) «/i»and nine years younger «b» B) Vojtěch«/b», born on «i» January 18, 1943«/i».
    Vojtěch has two daughters, both of whom studied Philosophy. He lives in Switzerland..

    Marie — JUDr Xyz PÁLEK. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 7. MUDr Jiří PÁLEK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 6 Srpen 1934, Praha, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 1999, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
    2. 8. Vojtěch PÁLEK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 18 Leden 1943.

  2. 6.  MUDr Hilar (ii) ŠPIČKAMUDr Hilar (ii) ŠPIČKA Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (2.Hilar2, 1.Josefina1) se narodil(a) 6 Červen 1903, Praha, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 8 Prosinec 1990, Praha, Czech Rep..

    Poznámky:

    «b»Hilar (ii) ŠPIČKA«/b» -
    studied at the Karlova University in Praha, and subsequently specialized in Internal
    medicine. During his medical studies he met his future wife «b»Eva Kubertová«/b». He was an avid and dedicated member of the Sokol movement. He had excelled in sports, particularly in gymnastics, and remained an accomplished athlete most of his life. Hilar [II] was a modest man of strong moral principles. He valued personal honesty above anything else. He never abandoned the principle of simple frugal lifestyle, acquired during his youth and during his University studies, when he often struggled to make the ends meet.
    After graduation, he held a position of an Assistant (Staff physician with academic appointment) at the Department of Internal medicine at the Vinohrady Hospital in Praha. In «i» 1936 «/i»he opened a private practice, with a subspecialty for diseases of the gastro-intestinal tract«i» . «/i»He kept his private practice until late «i» 1950s«/i», when the Communist government in a sweep of Nationalization of Healthcare closed all private medical practices. Subsequently he worked in a Public Health Clinic at Klimentská Street in Praha.
    MUDr Hilar [II] had deep social feelings and his quest for social justice made him left leaning in his youth. However, the hypocrisy and duplicity of Communists in and after «i» 1948 «/i»left him deeply disillusioned. He had a natural gift to relate to people of all social backgrounds, and had been respected and loved by his patients. His daughter «b»Diana «/b»recalls assisting him after the official closure of his practice in his office, where he continued to see patients thus defying the official closure. This had been done at considerable risk for quite a longtime. The fact that he was never reported is a testimony of the loyalty of his patients.
    On «i» July 4, 1931 «/i»he married «b»MUDr Eva Kubertová .«/b»«i» «/i»The interlude between the time of their graduation from the Medical School and the liquidation of the Czechoslovakia after the Munich accord on «i» September 30, 1938 «/i»was relatively short. Nonetheless, they had enjoyed the just earned financial freedom, as well as
    the political freedom the "First Czechoslovak Republic" had offered. They vacationed travelling throughout the Europe, in particular enjoying the skiing in the Alps. At home, their favored sport activities were canoeing, hiking and mountaineering.
    At the beginning of the WW II he bought a family summerhouse with a large garden at Pikovice, at the bank of the river Sázava, some 30 km south of Praha. This proved to be an excellent decision, as the whole family had been enjoying it for a number of decades. For Hilar [II], who loved physical work and activity, the house, which required constant attention, and the with the orchard, became his regular escape on weekends and vacations mitigating the of life during the Communist era. Since the property was situated in the proximity of a military areal during the German occupation, it was expropriated in «i» 1944«/i», though r to the family after the end of the war. During the last year of the war Hilar and Eva sent three children to the family house in Libni During his retirement the beloved Pikovice to be Hilar [II]'s refuge and sanctuary. As long as his health allowed, he had been
    spending even longer periods of time there, enjoying above all the nature and the work in the He had been very fortunate that even in Praha he had a large garden. Having lived until end of his life in his own house in Praha surrounded by Daniel's family, and having the to watch his beloved granddaughters to grow up and mature, was a blessing of his age. And it had been made possible only because of the loving care of his daughter'96in'96law «b» Victoria, «/b»and his son «b» Daniel«/b». [II] and Eva Kubertová - had three children: «b» A) Daniel, B) Diana «/b»and «b» C) Hilar [III] .
    «/b»(«u»Source«/u»: «i»From Petr PETRIK: "«b»FAMILY CHRONICLE: Family of Diana Špičková«/b»" «/i»)

    Hilar byl(a) sezdán(a) s MUDr. Eva KUBERTOVÁ-ŠPIČKOVÁ, - plastická chirurgie 4 Červenec 1931. Eva (dcera od Julius KUBERT, - pražský setník a Bohumila (Milka) ZÁTKOVÁ-KUBERTOVÁ, - překladatelka angl. literatury) se narodil(a) 8 Prosinec 1903, Praha, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 16 Duben 1979, Praha. Czech Rep.. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 9. Ing. Arch. Daniel ŠPIČKA  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 5 Únor 1939, Praha, Czech Rep..
    2. 10. MUDr Diana ŠPIČKOVÁ-PETŘÍKOVÁ  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 16 Listopad 1940, Praha, Czech Rep..
    3. 11. Hilar (iii) Benjamin ŠPIČKA  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 22 Leden 1943, Praha, Czech Rep..


Generace: 4

  1. 7.  MUDr Jiří PÁLEKMUDr Jiří PÁLEK Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (5.Marie3, 2.Hilar2, 1.Josefina1) se narodil(a) 6 Srpen 1934, Praha, Czech Rep.; zemřel(a) 1999, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

    Poznámky:

    «b»MUDr Jiri PALEK -«/b»«i»
    «/i» Studied Medicine at the Karlova University in Praha and specialized in Internal Medicine and further in Clinical Hematology. Around the year «i»1968 «/i»he won a research scholarship at the Harvard University, in Boston, Mass. He had an illustrious career not only in the Academia and research, but also as a teacher and clinician. Through his internationally recognized research in the field of red cells, his teaching, and his clinical acumen he had achieved a rare distinction of a full acceptance in the exclusive club of the New England medical establishment.
    Jiří had two children with his second wife «b» Majka«/b»: «b» A) Michal «/b»and «b» B) Nicole«/b», both born in the USA. At 55 «b» «/b»Jiří was diagnosed with a renal cell carcinoma (Grawitz tumor). In spite of expected favorable outcome, the disease spread and he succumbed to it and died ten years later.
    «b»Diana «/b»and I visited him and his family in «i»1971 «/i»in Boston«i», «/i»long time before he
    became ill.
    After his death his wife remarried. We lost contacts with her and her family.

    Jiří — Majka PALEK. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 12. Michal PALEK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
    2. 13. Nicole PALEK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

  2. 8.  Vojtěch PÁLEKVojtěch PÁLEK Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (5.Marie3, 2.Hilar2, 1.Josefina1) se narodil(a) 18 Leden 1943.

    Poznámky:

    «b»Vojtěch PÁLEK«/b» -
    As a son of an advocate he was denied access at the University and joined a production department of the renowned film studios at Praha Barrandov. Through my work at this chronicle, with help of «b»Daniel«/b», our families reconnected in the winter «i» 2013.
    «/i»He has two daughters, lives in Switzerland. I am much indebted to Vojta for his generous and meticulous help with the «i» Chronicle. «/i»He kindly shared with me many data and stories, and in particular the photographic archive of his side of family in his safekeeping. All this allowed me to expand the scant information I had about the families of the ancestors of «b»Palek «/b»and «b» «/b»families.

    Vojtěch — . Neznámé [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 14. Daughter-1 PALEK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa
    2. 15. Daughter-2 PÁLEK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa

  3. 9.  Ing. Arch. Daniel ŠPIČKAIng. Arch. Daniel ŠPIČKA Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (6.Hilar3, 2.Hilar2, 1.Josefina1) se narodil(a) 5 Únor 1939, Praha, Czech Rep..

    Poznámky:

    From Petr PETRIK: "«b»FAMILY CHRONICLE: Family of Diana Špičková«/b»"«b»
    Ing Arch Daniel Špička«/b» -
    Daniel, his sister Diana and brother Hilar [III] spent the end of the Nazi occupation in South Bohemian country house in Libnic, where their parents believed them sheltered from the expected bombardment of Praha (their Prague flat was actually hit by a German bomb on the very last day of the war, May 8th,1945 !)
    Daniel started elementary school at the English School in Praha, which was reopened in 1945 . Unfortunately the school, as well as all other educational institutions modeled on western schools were closed immediately after the Communist takeover in 1948.
    Daniel was also a Boy Scout until Communists abolished the Scout movement in 1949. He loved to draw and paint; yet the passion of his life became music, which he first discovered through private piano lessons. As he grew up and matured the list of musical instruments he played continued to expand, as well as the range of music he performed. Besides piano and other keyboard instruments he played guitar and viola da gamba, renaissance woodwinds and brass instruments. Nonetheless, he chose to study Architecture at the Technical University in Praha. While still at the University Daniel reminisces how instead of attending his lectures at the University, he spent hours in the Archives of the Library of the National Museum in Praha copying scores of otherwise unavailable music. Later, in 1977 he founded Capella Renesex, a group of professional musicians with a mission to perform renaissance and early baroque music on authentic instruments.
    As a young boy he was deeply impressed by Alexander Dumas' Three Musketeers and vowed to master the three skills of his hero swashbuckling d'Artagnan: horse riding, fencing and shooting. Although he accomplished all three, it was horse riding he pursued with greatest passion. Since the Communist ideologists considered this activity as a decadent aristocratic pastime, it had been somewhat difficult to get into it. The riding school in Praha, which had a long tradition, and which I also attended, survived only thanks to disguising itself as a paramilitary organization. I believe it was there I met him for the first time. Subsequently Daniel used every opportunity to ride horses. During summer holidays he worked hard in breeding stables, which gave him an almost unlimited riding time, and in the Barrandov Film Studios, where he used to play extras requiring horse riding skills in historical movies.
    In 1970 he met Victoria Wentworth Reilly in Praha. Victoria was born on July 30, 1941 in Clewer, Windsor. Her father Paul Reilly was born in Liverpool and her mother Pamela Wentworth Foster in London, England. In 1957 Victoria moved with her mother to Canada, and studied at the Toronto Collegiate Institute. Subsequently she went on to study General English at Trinity College, University of Toronto, graduating in 1962 . Victoria was sent in 1970 to Praha by The Sunday Telegraph to write about the Czech glass industry. The meeting turned out to be momentous, and Daniel and Victoria married on January 13, 1973 in London, England. Victoria's move to Praha at the height of the Communist repression following the aborted "Prague Spring " of 1968 was very courageous indeed. It was the time when all hopes of regaining lost political and personal freedom were crushed. The couple continued to live with Daniel's parents in the family house U Mrázovky.
    Victoria and Daniel have two daughters: A) Katherine (Kateřina) Wentworth Špičková-Demelová, born on May 14, 1974 in London, England, and B) Lucie (Lucy) Wentworth Špičková-Thorpe, born on February 18, 1977 in Praha. (And five grandsons, now).
    As an architect Daniel devoted his career mostly to interior and furniture design, as well as the restoration of historical buildings and interiors. Daniel built up a private collection of historical musical instruments, which he restored and even built himself. The ongoing practice of music remains an important constant of his life. One of his the most notable achievements has been the founding of an annual Festival of Baroque Music in Valtice Castle in Moravia. The Festival, of which he had been an artistic director from its inception in 1989, became a cultural event with an established tradition until 2006. The result of his long involvement with Valtice has been the reconstructed Valtice Castle Baroque Theatre, designed by him and his partner Mikulas Hulec and completed in 2015.
    At the time of this writing he is as busy as ever, with many plans in both architectural restoration and music, never thinking of retirement.

    Daniel byl(a) sezdán(a) s Victoria WENTWORTH-REILLY-ŠPIČKOVÁ 13 Leden 1973, London, England. Victoria (dcera od Sir Paul REILLY a Pamela WENTWORTH-FOSTER) se narodil(a) 30 Červenec 1941, Windsor, UK. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 16. Kateřina Wentworth ŠPIČKOVÁ-DEMELOVÁ-ZÁRUBOVÁ  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 17 Květen 1974, London, England.
    2. 17. Lucie Wentworth ŠPIČKOVÁ-THORPE  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 18 Únor 1977, Praha, Czech Rep..

  4. 10.  MUDr Diana ŠPIČKOVÁ-PETŘÍKOVÁMUDr Diana ŠPIČKOVÁ-PETŘÍKOVÁ Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (6.Hilar3, 2.Hilar2, 1.Josefina1) se narodil(a) 16 Listopad 1940, Praha, Czech Rep..

    Poznámky:

    «b»MUDr Diana ŠPIČKOVÁ-PETŘÍKOVÁ
    «/b»Diana recalls her happy childhood in the family house U Mrázovky 7 and the summer vacations at the summerhouse with a large garden in Pikovice, a small village and recreational community at the bank of the river Sázava south of Praha. Amongst her cherished childhood memories are those of her aunt (really grandaunt) Olga (roz. ZÁTKOVÁ), and her beloved grandmother Bohumila
    ("bábu"). This affectionate nickname meaning "grandmother" or "old woman" in Russian dates
    back to the time when her grandchildren started to learn Russian in school. She gracefully
    accepted it, and in fact probably liked it.
    Diana' childhood was sheltered, protected from the shocks of political and social events.
    The children looked forward to grandaunt Olga's regular visits. Childless Olga loved her grandnephews and her grandniece like her own children, who particularly enjoyed her readings of
    fairytales. Their grandmother "bábu" was a kind, selfless and utterly modest person. Her
    health was anything but robust and she would hide her ailments to avoid others to worry about
    her, achieving just the opposite. Ultimately it was always her doctor son-in-law Hilar [II], who
    pulled her back to health.
    Diana learned to play piano, but did not persevere like her brother Daniel. She enjoyed
    horse riding in the same riding school as Daniel and myself. She graduated from the secondary
    school in «i» 1957«/i», at an incredibly young age of sixteen. Our school year was the first one to be hit
    by the reforms of the notorious Dr Zdeněk Nejedlý the first communist minister of education.
    Nejedlý introduced a unified system of education, which used as a guiding principle the lowest
    common denominator. All curricula were rewritten and history was remade. Undoubtedly, the
    worst hit by the reform was the secondary level. In the same year Diana was accepted at the
    Faculty of Medicine at the Karlova University, School of Dentistry. The first two pre-clinical years
    were common for both the Dentistry and the General Medicine programs. This is when and where
    we met and started to date in the fall «i» 1959«/i».
    From there on our live stories have intertwined. The Dentistry program was one year shorter than the General Medicine program. Diana obtained her diploma in «i» 1962, «/i»at a time when the graduates had virtually no say in job selection. She had to accept a job in a town of Chomutov near the border with Eastern Germany. By the ancient king's invitation the town and the whole region had been settled by German colonists, mostly during 14th and 15th centuries. Prior to that, the region had been sparsely populated. Archeological evidence shows succession and intermingling of both German and Slavic cultures.
    At the founding of the independent Czechoslovak state in «i» 1918«/i», and for the duration of the "First republic", the region was ethnically overwhelmingly German, and had been known as "Sudeten" (Sudety). On weekends «b»D«/b»iana used to come to Praha, and in turn I went to Chomutov to visit her, though less frequently. Although the mountainous, wooded country of Krušné Hory surrounding the town is beautiful, it is a region of large superficial deposits of bituminous ("brown") coal with large content of sulphur. The deposits extend across the border into the Germany. To satisfy the hunger for energy the whole area had been turned into a moonscape of strip-mines. The process was ruthless, with no respect for, and no consideration of historical and existing social structures and cultural heritage. Environment and nature had not been even considered an issue. More than 80 villages (true historically documented figure) had been razed and people with century-old roots in the countryside were mercilessly and forcefully relocated. In order to increase the efficiency, the coal was burned on site in several power plants. It became probably the worst environmental nightmare in the Central Europe of «i» 1950s. «/i»Acid rain destroyed forests not only in the Czechoslovakia, but also in several neighboring countries. The incidence of respiratory illnesses competed with those in the worst polluted areas in the world. The public health warnings of not opening windows did not stop a layer of fine ash to get in the houses and cover everything. I remember one cross-country skiing trip with Diana in then still beautiful nearby mountains, when the snow felt gritty like sandpaper. In spite of the shortage of doctors and dentists in the whole region, the system did not bother to provide them with decent living accommodations. Diana worked in Chomutov until our wedding in «i»1966«/i», when she married myself, «b»MUDr Petr PETŘÍK «/b»on «i» February 11, 1966 «/i»in Praha.
    Thanks to social networking rife in all Soviet client Communist countries, her mother «b»Eva «/b»secured her a position of a dentist in a small town of Suchdol at the outskirts of Praha. With no hope to find an apartment we moved in with my mother at Jungmannova street. This temporary solution thankfully lasted barely six months. On «i» September 30, 1966 «/i»I was permitted to leave the
    country to start a scholarship at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland. Incredibly, my permit
    allowed me to stay in Switzerland for 2 full years. Diana had to wait two months for the permission granting her a short visit. Finally, in «i» November 1966 «/i»she rejoined me in Lausanne. We
    never went back.
    Our two and half years in Lausanne had been one extended honeymoon. In spite of having very little, we were exalted by the beauty of the country, the neatness and order, abundance of everything, and a newly found freedom. We were in love and we could finally start our own life. At the beginning we lived very modestly, our only source of income having been my scholarship stipend. However, as soon as Diana passed a practical examination in Dentistry, she
    was allowed to work in the Swiss Public Dental system. She got a job in the Lausanne School
    Dental program. Our economical situation immediately and markedly improved. With Diana
    working, we bought an ancient VW beetle and went for simple vacations to France and to Italy.
    On weekends we went skiing and hiking in the nearby Jura Mountains and Alps. Of course, all
    this was at a very low budget, but for us it was something beyond imagination until then. Diana
    really enjoyed the work and the work environment, and met there a good friend. Also, her French
    had dramatically improved. She would have been happy to stay in Switzerland.
    As the end of my scholarship was approaching I was offered a permanent staff position at
    the Department of Histology and Embryology at the University of Lausanne, with a good prospect
    of advancement. Yet the situation in the department was such that I could not imagine staying
    there. Another issue was that of a language. Although my French was excellent, virtually all the
    scientific interactions in Switzerland were conducted in German, and my German was poor with
    little hope for improvement in French-speaking Lausanne.
    From the moment I left Czechoslovakia I harbored a desire to go to Canada. The rational part of this wish was to put an ocean between us and the Communist Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union. Switzerland appeared to be just too close. Also, Switzerland had been known as a country where assimilation was very difficult. At that time even second and third generation
    immigrants were considered foreigners. On the top of it, the process of recognition of my medical
    diploma appeared at that time very complicated.
    Yet, there was also an intangible, a dream from my youth of idealized Canadian wilderness, legacy of the Ernest Thompson Seton's Woodcraft ideal I grew up with, and the many books I read. I was also well aware of the high-caliber research in Canada and USA, and of the openness of the North American society compared to a very closed one of Switzerland. Following
    the invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact forces on «i» August 20, 1968«/i», our application for immigration to Canada was fast-tracked and on «i» December 30, 1968 «/i»we left Switzerland for
    Quebec City, where I was offered and accepted a teaching position at Laval University.
    This decision totally changed the lives of both of us. It brought disappointment and hardship for Diana. In spite of our attempts to find reliable information in Switzerland about Diana's prospects to work as a dentist in Canada, it was only after out arrival to Quebec to when we found out about all the obstacles on the way. For a foreign trained dentist to pass the examinations required for application for a license to practice Dentistry in Canada was virtually impossible. The reason was that the concepts and the practice of Dentistry in North America differed very significantly from those in Europe. Also, it was next to impossible to gain admission in a School of Dentistry, which had only several spots reserved for foreign graduates. And there was a very long waiting list. An opportunity we regretfully missed had arisen in «i» 1969«/i», when the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine of University of Toronto was a Czech with deep sympathy of the newly arrived Czech colleagues. He fled Czechoslovakia either in «i» 1938 «/i»(Nazi occupation) or in «i»1948 «/i»(Communist takeover); which I cannot recall. He succeeded in the creation of a program at the U of T solely for the Czech and Slovak dentists who arrived in Canada in «i» 1968. «/i»The program fast-tracked them through the training and prepared them for the examinations, which all participants successfully passed. The catch was that the graduates had to take a job in a remote community in the northern Ontario in need of a dentist. At that time, with my position at Laval University in Quebec City, this condition appeared insurmountable.
    Both our sons were born in Quebec City during those years:
    «b»A«/b») «b»David William Peter PETRIK «/b»«i» (born on August 17, 1970), «/i»and «b»
    B) Christopher Hilary Andrew PETRIK «/b»«i» (born on January 27, 1972).
    «/i»With no family support and help, caring alone for our first-born David, her isolation wasalmost complete. We both struggled with sometimes hard-to-understand Quebec French patois, so strikingly different from the French we got used to in Switzerland.
    In «i» 1972 «/i»we moved to Calgary, Alberta, where I started residency in Pathology, and the
    following year we moved again to Edmonton, where I finished my training and started to build up
    my medical career. During those years our means were quite modest. With an unparalleled
    ingenuity and dedication Diana was able to create a beautiful and wonderfully warm and
    comfortable home for our children and myself.
    In Edmonton, where we ultimately stayed for 28 years, she founded her own very successful program in Aerobic dance, and she run fitness classes for several decades. There she made faithful friends. We have always done all our activities together; now there were also David and Chris. For six summers in a row we kept returning to the Churchill River and adjacent lakes on wilderness on canoeing expeditions with the boys from their tender age. We cross-country skied in Edmonton area, and hiked and skied in the Rockies. In «i» 1989 «/i»we bought a condominium in Canmore. This added another dimension to our lives. We have used every opportunity to hike and ski in the mountains. In «i» 1999 «/i»we built our current house in Canmore, where we moved the following year, when I officially retired from my professional activities in Edmonton. Edmonton had been good to us; we lived there for almost 30 years, and we brought up there our family.
    («u»Source«/u»: «i»From Petr PETRIK: "«b»FAMILY CHRONICLE: Family of Diana Špičková«/b»" «/i»)

    Diana byl(a) sezdán(a) s MUDr Petr PETŘÍK 11 Únor 1966, Praha, Czech Rep.. Petr se narodil(a) 27 Únor 1940, Praha, Czech Rep.. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 18. David William Peter PETŘÍK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 17 Srpen 1970, Quebec City, Canada.
    2. 19. Christopher Hillary Andrew PETRIK  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 27 Leden 1972, Quebec City, Canada.

  5. 11.  Hilar (iii) Benjamin ŠPIČKAHilar (iii) Benjamin ŠPIČKA Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa (6.Hilar3, 2.Hilar2, 1.Josefina1) se narodil(a) 22 Leden 1943, Praha, Czech Rep..

    Hilar byl(a) sezdán(a) s Marija GRAORINOV-ŠPIČKOVÁ 22 Únor 1989, Belgrade, Yougoslavia. Marija se narodil(a) 23 Červen 1956, Yougoslavia. [Schéma rodiny]

    Děti:
    1. 20. Nikola ŠPIČKA  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 25 Květen 1989, Belgrade, Yougoslavia.
    2. 21. Natalija ŠPIČKOVÁ-  Schéma potomků až do tohoto místa se narodil(a) 7 Červen 1991, Belgrade, Yougoslavia.