Were it not for the Wehrmacht, I would not be alive today.
Karol Janoštiak was born in 1938, in Devínska Nová Ves. He grew up in the border area, in a house adjoining the railway signal box. Throughout the war, the family was hiding two Slovak military deserters. His uncle Karol was called up to join the rapid deployment division as an officer. Later, he was named commander and was killed in 1941, in Ukraine. Around 1942, a German officer Horst, who was originally from Austria, came to live with the family for two years. Following the liberation of the village, a Soviet Major Sergej, working as a doctor, stayed with the family for almost a year. The last person hiding with the Janoštiak family arrived in 1948. It was a student from Prague, planning a protest against Gottwald. When the barbed wire fences started to rise around the borders, the family helped the student to escape by crossing the Morava River. The student managed to emigrate to Australia. Karol Janoštiak trained to be an auto mechanic and worked in the Central Automobile Repair Services of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic´s Ministry of Interior. His first wife emigrated to the U.S. in 1969. In 1971, he remarried and had two kids.