It’s very simple. Vucik was a member of the Czech Socialist Workers Party at the time and served as the editor of the party newspaper. At that time, the Munich conspiracy betrayed his motherland, Czechoslovakia, which led to the fall of the Czech Sudetenland. In 1939, Germany annexed the entire Czechoslovakia. The fall of the country prompted him to take up his pen and call on the people to rise up against fascism and demand freedom and democracy. Because of this, he was arrested by the fascists. What he meant when he said this was: He was thinking about the motherland and the people, fighting for the independence of the motherland and the freedom of the people. He asked the people to unite and not be content with fascist rule. They must rise up to fight, fight for the independence of the motherland, and get rid of fascist rule. The "Report from the Gallows" he wrote in prison is a precious spiritual treasure for the proletariat around the world.