František Krajčír
František Krajčír (12 June 1913 – 18 May 1986) was a Czechoslovak communist politician and diplomat. BiographyThe son of a butcher, Krajčír was born and raised in Vienna before moving with his parents to Prague in 1926. After training as a bookseller and publisher, he was employed at the publishing house and bookstore V. Neubert a synové in Prague before opening his own bookstore in Hořice in 1937. After the occupation of the Czech lands by Nazi Germany in 1939, Krajčír approached the communist resistance movement, Krajčír formally joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) in 1945, and was appointed chairman of the city administration in Hořice immediately after the end of World War II. In the May 1946 elections he was elected to the Constituent National Assembly, and in the same year, he was elected to the Central Committee of the KSČ. In February 1948, he was appointed minister of internal trade. He would remain in this position in various governments until 1959, when he took up the office of minister of foreign trade, in which he served until early 1963. After serving as a deputy prime minister under Jozef Lenárt from November 1963 to April 1968, Krajčír was transferred to diplomatic service; he was the Czechoslovak ambassador to East Germany from January 1969 to the summer of 1971, and then deputy minister of foreign affairs from September 1971 to October 1978, after which he retired.[1] Honours and awards
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