The current inhabitants of the Czech Republic have a relatively deep awareness of the Czechoslovak antifascist resistance during the WWII. The nation revere their heroes. Even the Western Resistance has received its due respect after a long period of being marginalized by the Communists. Nevertheless, one group of anti-Nazi fighters had virtually vanished from the historical memory of the people: the antifascists among Czechoslovak minorities (Germans, Hungarians, Jews and other nationalities). Moreover, these people were often subjected to treatment otherwise due to "enemy population" in the post-war era.
It was only seventeen years after the Velvet Revolution in November 1989 that the group started to receive official recognition.
The aim of the Project is to bring their contributions to the re-liberation of the country into attention and to pay long overdue tribute to their efforts.
The general public will then have an opportunity to get familiar with the dramatic life stories through exhibitions, scholarly articles, Internet websites, radio programmes and a TV documentary.

Special attention will be paid to schoolchildren, as a special museum educational programme including a travelling exhibition will be a part of the Project's output.