Remembrance Week 2022

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František Fajtl 1912-2006

František Fajtl is remembered as one of Czechoslovakia’s most decorated WWII fighter pilots. He was the inspiration for Jan Svěvák’s 2001 film  Dark Blue World and is now one of the subjects of the Good Old Czechs His daughter is Jitka Režná-Fajtlová and we were honoured to welcome her into school as part of this year’s Remembrance Week.

Escape from Nazi-Occupied Czechoslovakia

Mrs Režná-Fajtlová spoke of her father’s escape from his homeland. Like many of his compatriots, he went first to Poland in 1939 and then fought in France. From 1940, he served in the 313 Fighter Squadron RAF and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.  From 1944, he fought with the USSR on the Eastern front. She explained that her father fought, not because he wanted to fight, but because he wanted to liberate his country. She also acknowledged the debt owed to the British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, and the British people. Until the Americans entered the war in 1941, Britain had stood alone against the Axis powers.

Imprisoned by the Communists

ECP students were fascinated to hear how, when the war ended in 1945, after first being hailed a hero, Fajtl was imprisoned by the communists in a labour camp. Mrs Režná-Fajtlová remembers her mother being summoned to the Ministry. An official told her that she would have to move out of the family home because it was too big for her and her two daughters. She protested and said her husband also lived there. But slowly she realised that he had been arrested and would not be coming home.

One of Mrs Režná-Fajtlová’s most moving memories of this time was of her younger sister, who was only a baby when their father was arrested. There was a photo of their father on the wall and every night, her sister kissed his photo so she wouldn’t forget him. When the family was eventually reunited, she greeted him with a kiss saying, “It’s Daddy – and he’s alive!” 

Order of the White Lion

Asked why she thought the communists treated her father and the other war heroes so badly, Mrs Režná-Fajtlová said it was because they couldn’t stand being wrong. It was only after the fall of communism that her father was fully rehabilitated. In 2004, he was awarded the highest state honour – the Order of the White Lion – Český rozhlas interview 29.10.2004 – and promoted to General. 

Mrs Režná-Fajtlová has written a book about her father. We will buy it for the library so that all our students can read his story.

Remembrance Sunday

Photo: Nicholas Edworthy, Year 2

We commemorate Remembrance Week at the English College every year. It is about remembering those who died for their country. On the Sunday closest to Armistice Day, which saw the end of WWI on 11 November 1918, the British Ambassador and Ambassadors from Commonwealth countries gather at Olšanské hřbitovy to lay wreaths at the war memorial and to pay tribute to those buried there. It is a special day for many people in the UK. Ceremonies like the one in Prague take place in every city, town and village in the UK, remembering those from the area who went off to fight and who never returned.

Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal

Another tradition during Remembrance Week is the RBL Poppy Appeal. The RBL organises one of the biggest charity collections in the UK. Volunteers sell millions of red paper poppies to raise money to help ex-servicemen and women and their families. The poppy was chosen as the emblem of the appeal because it was the first flower to grow back in the battlefields of France and Belgium after WWI. A factory was opened in south west London in 1922 that provided jobs for disabled ex-service personnel, making the poppies.

Founders’ Day 2022

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ECP Year 1 Choir

Founder Patrons

Pražská křižovatka provided the perfect setting for ECP’s Founders’ Day ceremony. A beautiful 14th century building, it has strong connections with our Czech Founder Patron, Václav Havel. We were celebrating the achievements of our students and remembering the people responsible for the opening of the English College in Prague in 1994. This year we paid tribute to our UK Founder Patron, Charles, Prince of Wales, now His Majesty King Charles III.

The Chairman of Governors, Denis Keefe CMG, reminded everyone of Prince Charles’s interest in Prague and the efforts made in the early 1990s to restore its historical buildings after years of neglect. Prince Charles also had a keen interest in education so when Václav Havel asked him if he would join him in becoming one of the English College’s Patrons, he willingly agreed. The two men had a friendship based on shared interests, not least in architecture. This was demonstrated by their joint support of the Prague Heritage Fund and its work in reconstructing the gardens below the Castle.

Royal Visits

Denis Keefe recalled Prince Charles’s first visit to the English College, in 2000, when he had escorted him on a tour of the Art Department. Our royal visitor had been so enthused by the work on display and in engaging in conversation with the students that because of his tight timetable, he had had to find a tactful way to end the discussion.

Guests were able to watch a video of historic footage of the two visits Prince Charles has paid to the school. The soundtrack to the video is one of Prince Charles’s favourite songs. He included it in a special radio programme to thank hospital radio volunteers who had helped entertain patients and staff in UK hospitals during the Covid pandemic.

Academic Excellence

But as well as looking back, ECP’s Founders’ Day is about celebrating the achievements of today’s students. There are subject prizes to recognise academic excellence and several students receive Founders’ Academic Prizes.

Talent Awards

In addition to prizes for academic excellence, a total of eleven students received Talent Awards to help them follow their interests outside school. Last year’s award winners told us how they had spent their prize money. One of them was Prince of Wales Scholar, Kryštof Folbrecht. He had bought a camera drone to enable him to develop his interest in filmmaking. From an award for cake making equipment for a student who would like to open her own cafe one day to one of our Ukrainian students who had to leave behind her full-size harp when she fled to Prague and is using her Talent Award to buy a Celtic harp, ECP encourages all its students to follow their passions.

Performances

There was also music and drama aplenty. We heard Shakespeare’s Sonnet 66 – as relevant today as it was in 1609, with its strong emphasis on the power of love. From Adele to Vivaldi, there was something for everyone and the final performance of the evening saw the whole of our Year 1 students coming together to sing Christina Perri’s A Thousand Years.

Visual Arts

Visual arts works were on display as well. Because of Pražská křižovatka’s wonderful mezzanine exhibition space, we were able to display all the work of our worthy prize winners.

President of the Student Council

And in one of the many highlights of the evening, the newly-elected President of the Student Council, Radim Sirůček, spoke movingly about what the College means to him.

He talked about the values of the English College. He said, “I’m sure you will agree with me, that some of the most important values that our school has been built on are open-mindedness, kindness, respect and healthy ambition. Values that have been inspired by our school’s Patrons.”

New issue of the ECP Newsletter (Issue 31)

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ECP trip

The English College in Prague has just published a new issue of The ECP Newsletter.

Read a new issue of the ECP newsletter. It brings information about new staff, start-of-year and DofE trips, sports events, Cheltenham Literary Festival and so much more. You can access the newsletter via this link.

Summary:

  • HM’s message
  • News
  • New staff
  • Trips
  • Sports at ECP
  • Student activities
  • Book Talk
  • Arts
  • ECPN

You can look at the archive of ECP newsletters here.