Karel Svoboda (table tennis)

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Karel Svoboda
Personal information
Nationality Czech Republic
Born(1913-07-06)July 6, 1913
Brno
DiedMarch 3, 1943(1943-03-03) (aged 29)
Frankfurt
Sport
SportTable tennis
Medal record
Representing  Czechoslovakia
World Table Tennis Championships
Bronze medal – third place 1931 Men's Doubles
Silver medal – second place 1931 Men's Team
Silver medal – second place 1933 Men's Team
Silver medal – second place 1933 Men's Team
Silver medal – second place 1935 Men's Team

Karel Svoboda (July 6, 1913 – March 3, 1943) was a Czech table tennis player who won multiple medals at the World Table Tennis Championships. Svoboda was a member of Obrana národa, a Czech resistance organization, and was captured and executed by Nazi Germany. He received the Czechoslovak War Cross 1939 after his death.

Biography

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Karel Svoboda was born in Brno on July 6, 1913.[1] His parents were Karel Svoboda and Josefa Svobodová (Berková) and he had one sister, Marie Svobodová. He represented Czechoslovakia in tennis and table tennis from 1931 through 1935.[2] He won a bronze medal at the 1931 World Table Tennis Championships in the men's doubles with Jindřich Lauterbach.[3] He also won four consecutive team event silver medals from 1931 to 1935.[4] After his studies, Svoboda served with an artillery regiment in Olomouc and returned home in the fall of 1938. He looked for a job for a year, then worked for three months at the West Moravian Electric Power Plant.

In February 1940, Svoboda was arrested as a member of the Obrana národa resistance organization. He was imprisoned in Brno in the Kounice dormitories, and later in Wrocław, Wohlau and Dietz. He was brought before the court at Frankfurt am Main on October 27, 1942, along with his friend Richard Peřina. Svoboda was sentenced to death and was executed on March 3, 1943.[1]

His remains, along with those of other executed people, was transported from Frankfurt am Main to Brno and buried with military honors on September 7, 1967 at the Central Cemetery of Brno. He received the Czechoslovak War Cross 1939 in memoriam.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Ing. Karel Svoboda". Encyclopedia of Brno History = Encyklopedie dějin města Brna. 2004. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Profile". Table Tennis Guide.
  3. ^ "Men's doubles results" (PDF). International Table Tennis Federation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-12.
  4. ^ "Table Tennis World Championship medal winners". Sports123.