Lieutenant General
František Fajtl (20 August 1912 - 4 October 2006)
was a
Czech fighter pilot of the World War II. He was a
RAF squadron and wing commander and
led a group of
Czechoslovak fighter
pilots who formed an air regiment under
Soviet Air Force command, supporting the
Slovak National Uprising in
1944. He was dismissed from the
Czechoslovakian Air Force after
the
Communists
came to power in 1948, and was only fully rehabilitated after the
Velvet Revolution in 1989. He
wrote many autobiographical books about his wartime experiences,
and was an inspiration for the 2001 film
Tmavomodrý svět
(
Dark Blue World).
Early life
František
Fajtl was born in Donín in northern
Bohemia, which was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire until after
World War I, when it become Czechoslovakia
in 1918, and now is a part of the Czech
Republic. In 1933, he attended, and in 1935 graduated
from, the Military Academy in Hranice
as a Pilot Officer. He became Lieutenant
Pilot in the
Czechoslovakian
Air Force in 1935, flying observation
biplanes, mostly
Aero
A.100 and
Aero A.101 with No.
63
Squadron in the 2nd Air Regiment "Edvard Beneš", based at Olomouc
and Přerov
in Moravia.
World War II
Escape to Poland and France (1939-1940)
After the
Occupation of
Czechoslovakia in 1939, in common with many Czech and Slovak
soldiers, he fled through Poland to France.
Fajtl joined the
Armée de l'Air (French Air Force)
ranked Sergent á titre étranger (Foreign Sergeant) and
fought in two Groupe de chasse (fighter wings) near
Lyon
and Paris, flying Bloch MB-152 and Morane-Saulnier M.S.406
aircraft. After the Fall of
France he escaped to North Africa through Port-Vendres
, and travelled to Great Britain via Gibraltar
, where he joined the Royal Air Force.
Battle of Britain and RAF assignment (1940-1942)
As a
RAF Pilot Officer he took part in the
Battle of Britain. He was a member of
No. 1 Squadron at RAF Northolt
and then No. XVII Squadron, flying
Hawker Hurricanes. He transferred to
No. 313 Squadron, which was formed at
RAF
Catterick
in May 1941
from Czechoslovakian pilots flying Spitfire. The squadron moved to
Cornwall
to escort bombers attacking north-west France, and
later moved to RAF
Hornchurch
in December
1941, to conduct ground attack
operations in the Pas de
Calais. Despite some apprehension at foreign pilots
flying in the RAF, his leadership was recognised, and he was
promoted to
Squadron Leader to
command
No. 122 Squadron in 1942.
Escape over Europe (1942)
On 5 May
1942 his Spitfire was shot down over northern France while
escorting bombers attacking Lille
, and
crash-landed near Hazebrouck
, within the heavily defended Atlantic Wall. He evaded capture and
made his way through the occupied and "free" Vichy France, over the Pyrenees
to Spain
where he was captured and imprisoned in a
concentration camp at Miranda de Ebro
. As a result of British diplomatic
intervention Fajtl was released after few weeks and returned to his
squadron in England via Gibraltar
.
Wing Commander (1942-1943)
After this episode he become a Liaison Officer. He was awarded the
Distinguished Flying
Cross in November 1942, and promoted to
Wing Commander.
He commanded the
fighter station at RAF Skeabrae in the
Orkney
Islands
, but dropped a rank to return to command No. 313 Squadron, flying Spitfire from RAF Ibsley
.
In January 1944, František Fajtl was assigned to command a group of
20 Czechoslovak pilots, forming the 1st Czechoslovak Independent
Fighter Air Regiment, in the Soviet Union as result of negotiations
between the London-based Czechoslovak
Government-in-Exile and
the Military Mission in the Soviet Union. The Air Regiment was part
of the 1st Czechoslovak Army corps, but was under the command of
the
Soviet Air Force.
The
Government-in-Exile's intentions were to support the rebellion in
occupied Czechoslovakia, which become later known as the Slovak National Uprising launched
on 29 August 1944 in Banská Bystrica
.
On 17
September 1944 Fajtl landed with the Regiment on Zolná airport near
Zvolen
from where,
and also Tri
Duby
airport, they supported the rebellion with Lavochkin La-5FN fighters. The Air
Group was a significant power, mostly due to their surprise effect.
The Germans did not realize the presence of a fighter group based
within the region. When the
Slovak National Uprising was
suppressed in October 1944, the air regiment returned to a Soviet
controlled airbase in Poland.
His last military assignment was during the
Ostrava
Operation in 1945.
Shortly after the World War II, František Fajtl was awarded many
orders and medals and served as a
Lieutenant Colonel in Czechoslovak
Army.
Persecution (1948-1989)
Fajtl was
treated as a hero on his return to Prague
in 1945, but
was dismissed from the Czechoslovak Air Force after the
Communists seizure
of political power in February, 1948. He was arrested by the
Stalinist government in 1950, because of his
connections to Britain.
He spent 17 months in a labour camp at Mírov
. For
many years, he was forced to live outside Prague and was subject to
many other restrictions. He was partially rehabilitated in 1968
during the
Prague Spring, but was only
restored to his rank after the
Velvet
Revolution in 1989.
Rehabilitation (1989-2006)
František Fajtl became a chairman of the Czech Airmen Association
and was promoted to
Lieutenant
General, the highest possible rank in
Czech Army. On 28 September 2004, he was awarded
the highest order of Czech Republic - the
Order of the White Lion.
František
Fajtl died on 4 September 2006 in Prague
, survived by
his wife Hana and two daughters.
Publications
He wrote 14 mostly autobiographical books about his wartime
experiences and also chronicles of the Czech soldiers fighting in
foreign armies during the war and about his sad experience with
communist persecution.
- Bitva o Británii ("Battle of Britain", 1991)
- Létal jsem s Třistatřináctkou ("I flew with the
313rd", 1991)
- Sestřelen ("Shot down", 1991)
- Generál nebe ("General of the sky", 1992) memoirs of
another fighter, František
Peřina
- První doma ("Home for the first time")
- Opět doma ("Home again")
- Vzpomínky na padlé kamarády ("Memories of comrades
killed in the war")
- Boje a návraty ("Fighting and coming home")
- Dva údery pod pás ("Two deep hits")
- Pouta nebes ("Shackles of heaven")
He was an inspiration for the 2001 film
Tmavomodrý svět
(
Dark Blue World).
Medals and Honours
Military Units
Czechoslovak Air
Force
Armée De l´Air
- CIC Avord
- CIC No. 6 Chartres
- ELD Chartres (May 18, 1940 – May 27, 1940)
- Groupe de Chasse III./9 (May 27, 1940 – June 6, 1940)
- Groupe de Chasse III./7 (June 6, 1940 – June 17, 1940)
- Groupe de Chasse I./6 (June 17, 1940 – June 20, 1940)
Royal Air Force
- No. 310 Squadron RAF (August 6, 1940 –
August 17, 1940)
- No.6 O.T.U. (August 17, 1940 – September 10, 1940)
- No. 1 Squadron RAF (September 10, 1940 –
September 25, 1940)
- No. XVII Squadron RAF (September 25, 1940
– January 24, 1941)
- No. XVII Squadron RAF (April 1, 1941 – May
27, 1941)
- No. 313 Squadron RAF (May 27, 1941 – April
27, 1942), (Squadron Leader: December 15, 1941 – April 27,
1942)
- No. 122 Squadron RAF "Bombay" (Squadron
Leader, April 27, 1942 – May 5, 1942)
- Czechoslovak Liaison Officer at No. 11 Group
RAF (September 1942)
- Czechoslovak Liaison Officer at No. 10 Group
RAF (October 2, 1942 – May 15, 1943)
- Commander of RAF Church Stanton
(until June 28, 1943)
- Commander of Skeabrae RAF Station
(June 28, 1943 – September 22, 1943)
- Commander of Ibsley
RAF Station (September 22, 1943 – September 24,
1943)
- No. 313 Squadron RAF (Squadron Leader,
September 24, 1943 – January 31, 1944)
Soviet Air Force
- 1st Czechoslovak Independent Fighter Air Regiment (Squadron
Leader: February 1, 1944 – May 22, 1944)
- 128th Czechoslovak Independent Fighter Air Regiment (Squadron
leader: May 22, 1944 – June 15, 1944)
- 1st Czechoslovak Independent Fighter Air Regiment "Zvolenský"
(Squadron leader: June 15, 1944 – May 14, 1945)
Aircraft
Aircraft used by country of origin.
Czechoslovakia
France
United Kingdom
Soviet Union
References
External links