The authors describe their work on a oral history project ran at the Jewish museum
Prague. They collected over 2 000 interviews of people who survived the persecution of the
Nazis, either Czech Jews, or those lived in the Czech Republic after 1945. Hyndráková and
Lorencová had a specific approach, simple in technique (with an old-fashioned tape recorder), but
close in human communication. Since the interviewees were not alienated by technical
surroundings, the survivors were quite open and talkative. Furthermore, the authors specify their
core preliminary findings about the nature of the survival. They also establish a new perspective
on the pre-war Czech Jewish society, mostly as very Czech feeling and assimilated. The survivors'
stories during the persecution are hard to generalise, but the authors show some of the incredible
fates of seemingly ordinary people.