“All of us had to take into account the danger and possibility of being taken prisoner there. For this eventuality I had an emergency grenade, if there was no other possibility left. There were only few people alive coming back from captivity.”
Dimitrij Smetana was born on 22 October 1920 in the village of Negrovec in the Carpathian Ruthenia. His parents had a small farm but did not have enough means to send their son to school. Then the Hungarian occupation came, making it impossible for young Dimtirij to study. He was forced to help in farming. The Hungarian occupants called him up to military service at the border patrol. In years 1943 - 1944 Mr Smetana was imprisoned in a labour camp near Budapest. They were digging trenches in minus 40°C. Consequently, Dimitrij spent a month and a half in hospital. In October 1944 Dimitrij Smetana entered units of the Czechoslovakian foreign army, and he fought at Dukla. After the war, Mr Dimitrij decided to stay both in Czechoslovakia and the army. He finished the elementary education and continued at the military academy in Hranice na Moravě. He then stayed in the army for 27 years.