They turned us into half-prisoners, yet they kept telling us that communism was a paradise like no other
Josef Hladiš was born on 11 February 1932 in Nivnice into a peasant family of Maria and Josef Hladiš. In 1945 he started to study at a Jesuit Gymnasium (grammar school) in Velehrad. Four years later, after the school was was closed, he entered the novitiate. On the night of April 13, as a part of the Operation K, he was interned in Bohosudov and later in Hájek near Prague, and finally in Klíčava, where he participated in the construction of a dam. The purpose of this internment was an ideological re-education. In 1953-1955 he performed military service, unlike other former novices he did not join the PTP. After the war, he lived in Ostrava and continued to associate with the Jesuits. In 1959, as a part of the trial against Jesuit priest Antonín Zgarbík and other members of the order, he was accused of subverting the republic. He was sentenced to 5 years in prison, loss of civil rights and property, but was released on amnesty in May 1960. In 1968 he returned to his priestly studies at the Roman Catholic Cyril and Methodius Divinity School in Litoměřice. In 1971 he was ordained a priest. He began his priestly career as a chaplain in Kroměříž. After a bold Christmas sermon, he was transferred to Prostějov. After the fall of the communist regime, in 1990-1996, he worked as a priest in Velehrad, where he participated in the preparation of the visit of Pope John Paul II. Since 2013 he has been a member of the local Jesuit community.