Everywhere I declare that the Slovak nation is amazingly flexible and in a short time we managed to cultivate an intellectual elite
Marta Hrušovská (born Polednová) was born in November 1937 in Bratislava. Both parents came to Slovakia from the Czech Republic, father as an expert in agricultural machinery. During the war, she was hiding with her family in Budmerice and Trenčianske Teplice. After the war, she completed her grammar school in Bratislava and in 1955 she started to study at the Faculty of Arts of the Comenius University - specialization Slovak Language and History. She married composer and music theorist Ivan Hrušovský. She worked in the Tatran publishing house, where she compiled a series of works by the forgotten Slovak republic authors. In 1968, she collected signatures among her colleagues for joining the Club of Involved Stakeholders (KAN) - the Prague Spring political movement. As a result, she was advised to leave the workplace at the beginning of normalisation. She worked at the Monument Office, where she came into contact with the historian Jozef Jablonický. She was questioned several times at STB to spy on him, but refused to cooperate. She was pleased to see the changes leading to the regime change in 1989. After the split of Czechoslovakia, she considered leaving for the Czech Republic but eventually remained in Slovakia. In 1993 she helped to establish the Czech Society in Bratislava.