The Nine Men of Praha -- Texas State Cemetery, Austin TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 30° 15.969 W 097° 43.558
14R E 622553 N 3348964
No Texas town sacrificed as much in WWII as did the tiny Fayette County town of Praha, which lost an entire generation of men in combat, the largest percentage loss of any US community during WWII.
Waymark Code: WMPY9B
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 11/09/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 9

From the Huffington Post: (visit link)

"In Memoriam: The Boys of Praha
by James Moore
Posted: 11/11/2009

They no longer exist. And even in the Texas farm country where they were boys, their names are slipping from memory. People who live among the green hills here are hardly more likely to know about Praha's loss than the strangers who travel the dark farm-to-market roads in their pickups and minivans, taking scenic detours on their way to Houston or San Antonio. This is understandable. Being told the factual history does not make the truth about Praha more believable. A trip, however, to the church and cemetery at Praha will leave the visitor carrying away a distinctly American heartache.

The few thousand visitors traveling to Praha for Veterans Day ceremonies approach from the north, noticing first the stark, white steeple of the parish church, which hovers brightly over the landscape. The blacktop of FM 1295 runs south off of U.S. Highway 90, directly at the Church of St. Mary's Assumption. Close to the cemetery, the pavement curls back deferentially to the west and infrequent traffic passes quietly, the distant hiss of wheels on asphalt insufficient to disturb the serenity of a spot many U.S. military veterans have come to view as almost holy.

Praha provides old soldiers a measurement of sorts for concepts like the price of freedom. There is, though, something incalculable, impossible to assess or even understand, about the sad history of Praha. Today, it is little more than a ghost of a town with only about two dozen residents. The New Handbook of Texas claims the population never surpassed 100 people during the 20th century. Those numbers are where the anguish begins in Praha's tearful truth.

After Veterans Day ceremonies conclude, the curious and the proud stand in front of the nine graves. There, they try to comprehend how war's bloody arm could reach this far, gather up this much life and destroy it. By the dates on their tombstones and the locales of the deaths, the Allied offensive against the Nazis, Mussolini and the Japanese is recorded in the destinies of these nine fallen farm boys. Little Praha was not protected from World War II by statistical improbabilities.

Pfc. Robert Bohuslav died Feb. 3, 1944, after Patton's and Rommel's tanks had already driven deep into North Africa, and the worst of the combat had passed. Three more sons of Praha went down in France, beginning the week after D-Day. The War Department sent notices of death to the families of Pfc. Rudolph L. Barta, June 16; 1944; Pfc. George D. Pavlicek, July 7, 1944; and Pfc. Jerry B. Vaculik, July 23, 1944. In Italy, Pfc. Adolph E. Rab became a casualty of war two days after Christmas 1944. Pvt. Joseph Lev, shot in the stomach during the attack of Luzon Island, died July 24, 1944. Pfc. Anton Kresta Jr.'s life ended in that same tropical theater on Feb. 12, 1945. On Sept. 7, 1944, Pvt. Eddie Sbrusch was lost at sea in the Pacific. Nineteen days later, Pfc. Edward J. Marek died in battle at Pelelieu Island. All their lives were lost, ironically, as an Allied victory appeared inevitable.

In the space of 12 months and nine days, Praha gave up most of its youth -- and nearly all of its future -- to confront unimaginable forms of evil on faraway continents.

The soldiers are buried in the Praha cemetery in two rows of four and three; Eddie Sbrusch's empty grave lies just to the northeast; George Pavlicek's remains rest in a family plot across the walk. Veterans Day 2002 finds the tombstones marked with small fluttering flags, toppled vases of plastic flowers, and wooden posts mounted with military service shields and American Legion emblems. The graveyard is unprotected from the pressing Texas sun, but nearby a centuries-old post oak tree reaches out with a promise of eventual shade.

These men are remembered, but not widely, and they are honored by name each Veterans Day. The loss to their families, however, and to the parish of Praha, is barely acknowledged by history. The commonality of their sacrifice, it has been argued, is what made it so powerful and gave America a source of righteousness. Veterans who gather, on the Praha church grounds each Nov. 11 tell bystanders, "Without places like Praha, there would be no place like the United States." But what war did to Praha still hurts. And it always will. Finally, the town itself -- mortally wounded by circumstance -- became a casualty.

...

At the outset of World War II, Flatonia and Praha were no different than many other rural communities across the American landscape. Patriotic fervor led people to gather scrap metal and rubber, delivering the materials further east on the rail line to the larger town of Schulenberg. Young men were coming in from the countryside to enlist and say their goodbyes before leaving for boot camp and deployment overseas. To call it a simpler time, though, is to belittle the emotional and intellectual complexity involved in the decision to serve. Even along the dirt roads of Fayette County, Texas, families understood that Hitler and Japan represented more than just a threat to Europe and the Pacific.

Nonetheless, no one was able to ignore the patriotic enthusiasm that followed the boys through their military careers. As they went away for training and duty, stories about them began to appear on the front pages of the local newspapers. The Flatonia Argus ran photos and headlines of hometown soldiers whenever they were promoted in rank or had been dispatched to an important battle. Letters written home from the front or from basic training were often printed on the front page of The Schulenberg Sticker. . . .

In Praha, they began to suffer. A notice of the community's first casualty was delivered in March 1944. Instead of a bold headline and a photo, The Flatonia Argus reported the death with a few matter-of-fact lines of copy in its March 16, 1944, edition.

"The War Department has notified Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bohuslav that their son, Pfc. Robert Bohuslav, was killed in action in Northern Africa. Services were held in St. Mary's church in Praha this past Sunday. Bohuslav died in Africa on Feb. 3, 1944. In addition to his parents, he is survived by two brothers, Ernest Bohuslav of Halletsville and Herman Bohuslav of Praha." The reporter did not mention the names of Bohuslav's sisters.

"There is not a Sunday in church when I don't think about him and pray for him," said Herman Bohuslav of Corpus Christi. "He was my big brother and he was everything to me. I can still see the two men from the Army coming up our farmyard to give the message to Momma and Daddy. It took me several years before I was even able to believe it had happened. I just kept believing my brother would come home."

...

"I'm sure what he did, he did for us," Bohuslav said. "I mean, there were some evil people in the world back then, you know. And something had to be done. My brother was a part of what needed to be done."

A scan of subsequent editions of the Flatonia publication offers no additional information of how Pfc. Bohuslav encountered his fate. No reportage is present to indicate the battlefield or his mission in Africa. The details of the end of Pfc. Bohuslav's life are undoubtedly locked up in Pentagon files in Washington on a database or in a drawer where his story is not easily accessed. Beyond the fence line of the Praha cemetery, Pfc. Robert Bohuslav is hardly more than a statistic.

To his family, however, he is the one who missed all the years with children and travel and vacations and holidays. He might have lived to 90, as did his father, or to his mid-80s, like his brother and sister. Bohuslavs are given to longevity. The private's oldest sister is 85 and his eldest brother is 83. Instead of working the farm, though, Pfc. Bohuslav commanded a bazooka, won two Purple Hearts and died on foreign soil.

The public was told slightly more about Pfc. Joseph Lev of Praha. As the U.S. began an offensive against the Japanese, Lev was part of the ground assault at Luzon Island. The announcement of his death was published in the Flatonia paper with the imminently predictable language.

"Mr. and Mrs. Emil J. Lev were notified by the War Department last week ..."

Lev, who came from a family of six children, was killed in action in July 1944. Apparently, the Lev household had too many children for the paper to list their names, and the two short paragraphs concluded with the information that one brother and four sisters survived Lev. Argus' headline pronouncing Lev's death was accorded no larger type than articles of lesser consequence, such as "Garden Club to Meet Sat." and "Barbecue Set for Labor Day."

Regardless of how Pvt. Lev's days unfolded prior to Luzon, his ending bore the drama of a movie. Were it scripted, producers might have called his death too saccharine a scene to be plausible. The Rev. John Anders, pastor of St. Mary's Church in Praha, notified the Schulenberg Sticker of a plea from Lev as he lay mortally wounded. Anders had received a letter from a soldier who had been next to the Praha man. Lev suddenly took a bullet in the stomach from a Japanese sniper and went down, doomed to slowly bleed to death after surviving the island's fiercest battle.

The narrative of the letter to Anders claimed Lev begged his comrade to write home to his parents about the disposition of his will. In New Guinea - before shipping out for the front -- Lev had been emotionally overwhelmed by the work of the Divine Word Missionaries, who had been serving the native children. In his final breath, Lev dictated to the soldier that his life's savings be sent to the New Guinea missionaries. On Feb. 15, 1945, Divine Word Missionaries received a check for $4,204.11 from a Praha boy, who died in the tropical sands not far from where the missionaries served.

Death in combat, of course, is rarely glorious. Accidental, almost meaningless casualties can be even more painful. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Sbrusch of Praha had heard their son, Eddie, had been taken as a prisoner of war in Luzon. In uniform, photographed before going overseas, Pvt. Sbrusch had a head of curly, disorganized hair offset by almost pointed ears. His face made him appear diminutive, but his wide smile showed him eager and his eyes ready.

On Sept. 7, 1944, the Japanese were moving POWs from the Philippines to an unknown location when a U.S. vessel attacked the transport carrying the flag of the rising sun. American commanders, unaware their own men were in the hold of the Japanese ship, launched a torpedo and sank the transport. Japanese authorities later reported 750 Americans were aboard. Pvt. Sbrusch's remains were never recovered. The Flatonia Argus wrote that his parents, two brothers and one sister survived him.

The boys of Praha live now only as fading memories and sepia-toned photographs. A small sheet of paper posted on the western wall of their Praha church displays all their portraits. In the sanctuary where they sat through Mass and Sunday sermons as boys, the display gets no more attention than might a group photo of a local championship baseball team. On the church grounds, however, three separate prayer chapels have been built in their honor.

In his picture, Lev's service cap is cocked to the side of his head to suggest indifference, but his soft, boyish features give him away as sensitive and intellectual. Jerry Vaculik and Anton Kresta appear thoughtful, while Eddie Marek is happy and dimpled. Looking at the expectant grin of Rudolph Barta, anyone might think he lived a healthy and financially rewarding life, which ought to be just concluding with the laughter of grandchildren at his feet.

Behind the church at the gated entry to the cemetery, a memorial stands to honor the lost sons of Praha. Names and photos are arranged in a perfect row along the bottom of the marble pedestal. Dates and locations of their deaths are carved into the stone.. .

Unlike Veterans Day, on most days of the year no one is present to learn the stories of these men. Visitors spot the faded flag over Eddie Marek''s headstone and the vase of plastic buttercups, tipped on its side where Anton Kresta lies. On either side of the graveyard fence, the land lowers easily into a green world where things are growing and people are living another season in freedom.

Nothing ever changes here until the Sunday morning before Veterans Day when U.S. military servicemen and women from across the country gather to listen to speeches, which never come close to explaining this loss. Their minds are forced to simplify the tragedy of Praha. Vintage aircraft fly overhead; one peels off into the missing man formation, and flowers are dropped, settling like a sad rain across the cemetery. The tears fall faster.

If they were to look in a Fayette County phone book before returning home, visitors to Praha might recognize a few surnames. Mostly, though, the family members of the nine lost boys of Praha have spread out, moved away and lived out their time in quiet anonymity. Their lineages are disappearing while war survives.

Before he died, Vietnam Medal of Honor recipient Roy Benavides of nearby El Campo, Texas, told a Veterans Day crowd at Praha that "people need to know about this place. They need to hear about what happened. They need to understand."

Understanding may prove eternally impossible. But if every leader of every country were first made to visit Praha before declaring war, the world might be forever changed."
Type of Memorial: Non-Specific Memorial

Wars mentioned (Multi-war only):


In Honor Of: the nine men of Praha who perished in World War II

Marker Text:
[Front] THE 9 MEN OF PRAHA Nine men of Praha, a rural community in Fayette County, died in service to their country during World War II between February 6, 1944 and February 12, 1945: PFC Rufolf E Barta United States Army PFC Robert V. Bohuslav United States Army PFC Anton Kresta Jr. United States Army Pvt Joseph Lev United States Army PFC Edward J. Marek United States Army SSGT George D. Havlicek United States Army PFC Adolf E. Rab United States Army Pvt Eddie Sbrusch United States Army Air Forces PFC Jerry R. Vaculik United States Army [back] The community of Praha gave its future for the cause of freedom in the form of nine young men who died in service for their country during a 12 month period of World War II. PFC Rufolf E Barta was killed in the invasion of Normandy, Freance on June 6, 1944. PFC Robert V. Bohuslav was wounded in the Battle of Cassino, Italy, and later died in North Africa on February 3, 1944. PFC Anton Kresta Jr. was killed in action on February 12, 1945, on Luzon, Philippine Islands. Pvt Joseph Lev was killed by a sniper on July 24, 1944, on Philippine Islands. PFC Edward J. Marek was killed by machine-gun fire on Peleilu Island on September 26, 1944. SSGT George D. Havlicek died in France on July 7, 1944, from wounds received in action. PFC Adolf E. Rab was killed in northern Italy when an enemy shell landed near his foxhole on December 27, 1944. Pvt Eddie Sbrusch was lost at sea on September 7, 1944, when the ship transporting him and other prisoners of war to Japan was torpedoed by an American submarine. PFC Jerry R. Vaculik was killed in action in France on July 23, 1944."


Date of dedication: 11 Nov 2002

Who Put it Here?: state of Texas

Description of Memorial:
The memorial is a slab of pink granite engraved on both sides with the names and circumstances of the deaths of the 9 Men from Praha


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