Přemysl Pitter
Přemysl Pitter was a Czech humanist, pacifist, pedagogue, social worker and evangelical preacher. He founded Milíč House in Prague, during World War II supported Jewish families and after the end of the war organized the “Operation Castles” in which he and his colleagues provided health and social care for children from German concentration camps as well as those from Czech internment camps. After the onset of the communist regime he was forced to emigrate. First he worked in Germany, where he provided pastoral and social support to the refugees in the Valka refugee camp near Nuremberg, later lived in Switzerland. Přemysl Pitter was named Righteous Among the Nations by the Israeli government, in 1973 he was awarded The Order of Merit Ist Class of the Federal Republic of Germany and in 1991 President Václav Havel conferred upon Přemysl Pitter the Order of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, in memorian.
Early life
Přemysl Pitter was born on 21 June 1895 in Prague - Smíchov to Karel Pitter, owner of a printing company, and his wife Žofie Pitter. His six siblings died in infancy, so he grew up as an only child. He studied at a typographical school and a business college in Prague; between 1911 and 1912 he attended a printing school in Leipzig.He was deeply affected by the death of his mother in 1911 and his father in 1913; the printing company he inherited was in financial trouble. In an attempt to solve his problems, Pitter enlisted as a volunteer during World War I. His terrible war experience affected him for the rest of his life; he returned a devout Christian and a pacifist. He decided to dedicate his life to helping others.
Public activity 1920-1938
After the war he began to dedicate himself to public and educational activities. He lectured at various places and began to organise activities for socially endangered children in Prague Žižkov. He also became a member of many associations such as The Academic YMCA, The War Resisters´ International, International Fellowship of Reconciliation, Czechoslovak Vegetarian Club, League Against Anti-Semitism or The League for Human Rights. Between years 1924 and 1941 he published and edited the magazine Sbratření. He participated in an international conference of the International Fellowship of Reconciliation in Oberammergau in 1926, where he met the teacher Olga Fierz: for the rest of his life Fierz was his closest associate.Working for children was his most important activity. He founded Building and housing association The Milíč House in 1922 and started to collect financial means from donors. The Milíč House was opened on Christmas Day 1933 and children from poor families could spend their free time there with various activities such as singing, handicrafts, table games, theatre play, German courses or cooking, sports games or gardening. Prague Milíč House was based on voluntary cooperation and solidarity.
In 1938, a year-round sanatorium was set up in Mýto by Rokycany. The first inhabitants of sanatorium were children of refugees from Sudetenland. Several of them managed to leave Czechoslovakia in children´s transports organized by Nicolas Winton.