Přemysl Pitter served in the Austro-Hungarian Army during WWI. After returning home to Prague, he became a Christian and helped establish a children’s home in the city’s poorest neighborhood. The local children, many of them Jewish, stopped by Milíč House after school “where they would be fed and could safely play, read, listen to music, learn crafts, or participate in gymnastics.”
After German troops occupied the western half of Czechoslovakia in the spring of 1939, Nazi laws prevented Jewish children from attending public school, and Milič House became a place for them to study. Later it became a place to hide. Parents took their children to Milíč House to protect them from deportation. After other parents were arrested, Pitter rescued their children.
As conditions worsened for the Jews of Czechoslovakia, Pitter took food to Jewish families in Prague, the capital. He sent children to safe houses in the country about fifty miles away. One day Gestapo agents picked up Pitter and took him to their headquarters. The Gestapo chief questioned why he would risk his life to help Jews. Pitter’s response was simple. “‘From a human point of view, I’m sure you can understand why I’m helping these children.’”
The Gestapo released Pitter, and he and the staff who’d prayed together for his safe return, rejoiced at their answer to prayer. He continued to assist Jews by raising money and warning those who were about to be deported to hide.
Pitter hid Jewish children for over six years. The exact number of children he saved from the Holocaust is unknown, but his job didn’t end with the fall of the Third Reich. After the war, the newly formed Czech government requested that Pitter find and take care of Jewish orphans from Czechoslovakia. He located hundreds of orphaned children from several European countries and housed them in sprawling, abandoned chateaus around Prague.
Many of Pitter’s orphans were concentration camp survivors, including hundreds rescued from Theresienstadt in May of 1945. These children were traumatized and physically weak and ill. Under the care of Pitter and his assistants, the orphans healed in spirit, mind, and body and began to trust people again.
Pitter’s goodwill extended to the children of incarcerated Germans living in deplorable conditions in Czechoslovakia after the war. Pitter petitioned the government not to behave as badly as the Nazis had but to treat the Germans better. In the end, Pitter rescued German children too. He brought them to live with the Jewish children who put aside their fear and hatred and showed compassion toward their former tormentors.
Eventually, Pitter placed many of the Jewish children in adoptive and foster homes and organized the departure of others for Israel. Seven hundred children were sent to Great Britain at the request of Jews there.
After the Soviets imposed a communist government on Czechoslovakia, Pitter was forced to flee his native country and continued his refugee work in West Germany. He later settled in Switzerland where he wrote several books and worked for Radio Free Europe.
Pitter expressed great concern over Western culture’s postwar shift from a God-centered worldview to a man-centered worldview. He had witnessed the tragic results when the German people turned from God and relied on the government to save and provide for them. He spread the biblical message that “without Jesus Christ, man’s inherent sinful nature would inevitably draw him toward a darkened heart.” He believed that this darkness had opened the hearts of many to the swastika.
Sources:
Gragg, Rod. My Brother’s Keeper. Center Street, 2016.
“The Righteous Among the Nations – Pitter Family.” Yad Vashem.
“Přemysl Pitter.” Knihovna.