The head of Kubiš, Gabčík and the body of Jan Masaryk
On 18th June 1942, not far from Albertov, the Nazis were besieging the church of St Cyril and Methodius where the seven parachutists from England had been hiding. After several hours of fighting the soldiers were either killed or they committed suicide. The Nazis took all the bodies to the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Albertov, where an autopsy was carried out: “Yes, I remember that their bodies had been there for a long time, their skulls were displayed in a showcase,” Květoslava Neradová recollects. All the bodies had their heads separated from them, the head of Gabčík and Kubiš was to be maintained with the face as well, that is why it was specially preserved, placed in a glass cylinder with a preservative solution and locked away in a cabinet in the autopsy room of the Institute. The heads of the remaining five parachutists underwent taxidermy. Josef Pánek together with other Czech employees planned to get hold of the remains at the end of the war, in order to bury them reverently. But they did not manage to save them. On 20th April 1945, the Gestapo took them away and what happened to them next has not been credibly clarified. Květoslava Neradová recollects how her father, custodian of the Institute, once took her to the autopsy room when she was fifteen years old. It must have been in March 1948, shortly after the Communist putsch in February. The body of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Jan Masaryk, was lying on the autopsy table. “My father covered him with a newspaper so that I wouldn’t see him naked. My father’s assistant Tesař approached the body from the other side. Both of them, he and my father, had experience, they knew how people who had fallen from a window look like. Spontaneously they stated: ‘This isn’t suicide, this is not how a person looks like after suicide.’ But the doctors claimed that it was suicide, in the autopsy protocol. My father kept claiming that it wasn’t suicide, I remember one of the reasons: Masaryk’s hands were grazed. A person who jumps from the window isn’t trying to hold on to the plastering of the building.”
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