Career
Junák was abolished by force and Scouting prohibited by German State Secretary Karl Hermann Frank during the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia on October 28, 1940. After World World War II, the association was reborn. His function was confirmed at the third Junák council or meeting (cs:sněm) in 1968, and served in this function until the end of his life.
Plajner was an Doctor rerum naturalium, the Czechoslovakian doctorate in natural sciences, specializing in math and physics at Charles University in Prague.
Between 1929 and 1959 he lived and taught at the cs:reálné gymnázium (high school) in Holešov. Plajner took part in building Defense of the Nation (cs:Obrana národa) and in other resistance organizations.
He was arrested in 1943, and released after two months. He again joined the Czechoslovakian resistance to Nazi occupation and cooperated with guerrilla brigade "January Žižka".
Plajner was arrested and imprisoned shortly in 1949 in Uherské Hradiště.
Junák shortly renewed its existence between 1968 and 1970 after the Prague Spring. Plajner spent the end of his life in Luka pod Mednikem, now part of Jílové u Prahy, where he wrote a series of books and writings about the history and Scout life of the Junák movement. He published mostly on Scouting topics, and is the author of the Scout handbook Přiručka pro Junáky, Junácké hry pro školy a oddíly (Junák games for schools and troops), Radosti junáckého roku (Joys of the Scout year) and Úsvit českého junáctví (Sunrise of Czechoslovakian Scouting).