Přemysl Pitter was born on 21 June 1895 in Prague - Smíchov to Karel Pitter, the printer´s owner, and his wife Žofie Pitter. His six siblings died soon after birth or in their childhood, so he grew up as an only child. He studied typographical school in Prague and Business College in Prague, between 1911 and 1912 he attended book printing school in Leipzig. He was deeply hit by the death of his mother in 1911 and his father in 1913, the inherited printing company was in financial trouble and as a solution of his problems Pitter declared himself as a volunteer at the front of World War I. The terrible war experience had affected him for a lifetime, he returned as a deeply religious Christian and a pacifist. He decided to dedicate his life to help other people.
Public activity 1920-1938
After the war he began to dedicate himself to public and educational activities. He lectured at various places and began to organise activities for socially endangered children in Prague Žižkov. He also became a member of many associations such as The Academic YMCA, The War Resisters´ International, International Fellowship of Reconciliation, Czechoslovak Vegetarian Club, League Against Anti-Semitism or The League for Human Rights. Between years 1924 and 1941 he published and edited the magazine Sbratření. He participated in an international conference of the InternationalFellowship of Reconciliation in Oberammergau in 1926, where he met with teacher Olga Fierz who became his closest associate for the lifetime. Working for children was his most important activity. He founded Building and housing association The Milíč House in 1922 and started to collect financial means from donors. The Milíč House was opened on Christmas Day 1933 and children from poor families could spend their free time there with various activities such as singing, handicrafts, table games, theatre play, German courses or cooking, sports games or gardening. Prague Milíč House was based on voluntary cooperation and solidarity. In 1938, a year-round sanatorium was set up in Mýto by Rokycany. The first inhabitants of sanatorium were children of refugees from Sudetenland. Several of them managed to leave Czechoslovakia in children´s transports organized by Nicolas Winton.
At the time of German occupation, the Milíč House became the centre of secret support for persecuted Jewish families. Pitter was interrogated by the Gestapo, fortunately he was released. Immediately after the end of the war, Pitter initiated the “Operation Castles”, action to help children coming back from the concentration camps, among others Yehuda Bacon. Castles Štiřín, Olešovice, Kamenice and Lojovice were transformed into sanatoriums. The “Operation Castles” was soon expanded to help German children from internment camps, too. During the deportations of Germans, Pitter tried to arrange the reunion of the children with their parents or relatives. The search for the lost children was based at the Milíč House office, which cooperated with German search services until 1950. A total of 810 children went through the “Operation Castles” between 1945 – 1947.
Exile
After February 1948, when the Communists seized power, Pitter and his colleagues began to be persecuted. The Milíč House was transformed into a regular after school club. Pitter emigrated to the Federal Republic of Germany in summer 1951. He started to cooperate with BBC and Radio Free Europe since 1952. For 10 years Přemysl Pitter and Olga Fierz became social workers in the Valka refugee camp near Nuremberg. Since 1962 they lived in Affoltern am Albis, Switzerland. They published an exile magazine Hovory s pisateli. Pitter was active in immigrant associations. He died in 1976.