We can forgive, but we will never forget
Milan Brišš was born in 1930 in the village of Zákamenné in Orava region. He came from a large family and since his childhood he was led to be a hardworking and responsible person. His father, a war invalid, had a general store and this fact changed the life of the whole family especially after the seizure of power by the communist party in 1948. However, the years of his youth were affected mainly by the Second World War, which brought many dramatic situations into his life. Firstly soldiers and partisans deprived the family of everything they had found and then, the Germans took his father to the town of Cieszyn, where he spent a month. The end of war in 1945 meant for Milan’s family only a temporary relief from persecution. Later, his father was deprived of his shop by the communists, and the family found themselves in danger of forcible eviction several times. Milan and his siblings felt consequences of the communist policy mainly when they were not allowed to study. After the school leaving examination Milan wanted to pursue his studies, but due to his “inappropriate origin” he wasn’t accepted to university, but received call-up papers to a mine. From October 1951 to February 1954 he worked in a pit in Ostrava-Karviná region, where he was doing his military service, even though he had never seen a mine before. Working there was really strenuous; he had to be present at exhausting marches and live in the heat and in ubiquitous dust. After being released in the year 1954, he worked at school in Riečnica village in Kysuce region for a short period of time. In the same year Milan was accepted to the Faculty of Law of Comenius University in Bratislava; however, he was dismissed in the third year. Suddenly, he was in a very difficult situation and managed to go through it only thanks to the help of his acquaintance, a linguist Anton Habovštiak, who offered him a temporary job in the Slovak Academy of Sciences. He also earned some extra money as a singer in the Czechoslovak Radio. Milan never intended to give up and appealed against his expulsion to the Ministry of Education several times. He made his dream of higher education come true at the Pedagogical Faculty of Comenius University, where he graduated from geography and history for elementary school in 1958. He gained his first teaching experiences in Veľké Leváre, in Sološnica, and in Devínska Nová Ves, where he spent five years. He also gained necessary qualifications for teaching at secondary schools, so then he worked at several grammar schools in Bratislava. He was employed in the National Institute for Education in Bratislava from 1977 to 1991, and thence, at the age of 61 years, he went to work to the centre for inspection at the Ministry of Education. He has been a freelancer since 1995 and still lectures on law at various institutions.