We were happy that the war was over and we looked forward to starting a new life. However I cannot say that there would be peace even today.
Ivan Major comes from Carpathian Ruthenia. His parents were small independent farmers and Ivan was also helping on the family farm. In 1939, Carpathian Ruthenia became occupied by the Hungarian army, and Ivan therefore together with two other friends decided to leave for the Soviet Union. They managed to cross the border, but about three kilometers behind the line they were all captured by a Soviet border patrol. After sessions of interrogations they were sentenced to three years of imprisonment. Mr. Major went through several Russian prisons - Starobělsk, Stanislav, Pečora and others; afterwards he was transported to Siberia and interned in a labour camp there. At the beginning he was released in amnesty and together with others he went to Buzuluk to join the army there. After only seven days spent in the barracks his unit moved to the front. He was assigned to a mortar unit, in which he fought till the end of the war. The soldiers were transported to a place about three hundred kilometers from Sokolovo, from which the troops had to walk the rest of the distance to Sokolovo. In 1942 he wet through an NCO training academy and in September returned to the front again, this time in Kiev, which they liberated jointly with the Soviet Army. From there the troops advanced further to Ruda and Bílá Cerkev, where the fighting was very intense. Mr. Major was wounded by a splinter which hit his thigh. After being treated in a Czechoslovak field hospital he continued with his unit to Sagadura, where the Czechoslovak army corps was being organized in 1944. After the outbreak of the Slovak national uprising his unit participated in the Carpathian-Dukla operation. At Dukla he sustained another injury, this time by a splinter which penetrated his lung. He spent many months in hospitals and the injury caused permanent damage to his health. After that, he did not return to action anymore. After the war he remained in the army for two more years; then worked in a tobacconists´ and in the Jednota grocery shops chain. He is retired now, but still actively involved in various war veterans´ unions, especially the Czechoslovak Association of Legionaries.