Oskar - Pojkart
In the small, windswept village of Strání, nestled in the foothills of the White Carpathian Mountains, there lived a man named Pojkart Oskar. Born in 1887, Oskar was neither a soldier nor a politician. He was a tinsmith—a craftsman of sheet metal, tin, and patience. But his story is not one of war or wealth; it is a story of light in darkness.
When it was safe to move the family to a contact in Uherský Brod, Oskar guided them himself, using one of his double-walled lanterns—its light invisible from more than twenty meters away. The Goldmanns survived the war. The little blue lantern remains in a private collection in Prague, still functional, still bearing Oskar’s star and motto. Pojkart Oskar
These were not ordinary lanterns. Oskar’s lanterns had a double-walled chimney, a spring-loaded candle platform, and a hinged brass reflector that could be angled to throw light forward or backward. Farmers used them to walk cow paths at midnight. Midwives carried them to births in isolated cabins. Children took them to Christmas mass through snow so deep it swallowed fences. In the small, windswept village of Strání, nestled