Ján Rišian

* 1928

  • "After that, we were used for hedging operations. In the preparation of the uprising, the cadre question was included, that those who collaborated with the fascist units and with the regime were evaluated, the main functionaries, and secured. This securing meant that they were arrested and taken to that Sklabina and there was a military court. And that's where they were escorted to that court, and those who were very dangerous and who had a history of actions of abusing people or liquidating people were sentenced to death. That's where they were tried too! Some of us were used to accompany somebody when there was that detention action. There was a strong German minority in Horna Štubnia and Dolna Štubnia, and those Germans mostly had personal weapons, and even machine guns, submachine guns, so it was necessary to purge them, to disarm them, so that they simply couldn't harm us."

  • "The first attack that there was, which they considered a mass attack on us, the strongest that there was, was an attack of six cars full of German soldiers, infantry. They didn't know exactly where we were. We were on a bare high ground. There was a road from Žilina, which turned to Turie and continued on to Rajecké Teplice. There was a sawmill below the hill, inhabited. The road went to Rajecké Teplice and then crossed a bridge. The Germans walked alongside us, we saw them. We could have thrown grenades at them, but we couldn't do anything, we had to wait for the right side to start fighting. That was the signal, when the machine gun fire came, we were to join in. After that bridge the road to Rajecké Teplice continued and there was a mined road. They hit it and now it blew up with the soldiers. The first two cars caught fire, the next four stopped. The Germans jumped out of the cars and wanted to go into the forest. There was a forest on the right and a bare high ground on the left and that's where we were. They were pushing under the bridge because there was heavy fire, our soldiers densely lined up on that mass. They were simply not able to put a shot against us. We wiped out all those soldiers. They had a mass grave there. Those people together had to make a mass grave and they buried them there. When our people checked what kind of soldiers they were, they were Austrian boys who were eighteen or nineteen years old. They were mostly killed there. None of our soldiers from that bare heights and none from that forest. Because the Germans were not able to defend themselves at all. It was such an ambush, such a shower. That was the most successful attack I had in that time."

  • "The supply was terrible. You were either starving or we had sheep. Two of us watched them, looked after them, and we would pack a piece of raw meat or we could roast it on the fire in the field during the day, but not at night, and we ate that, no bread, no salt, no preparation. When I went to get provisions with the cooks, the shopkeeper gave me chocolate and I thought I had got gold. I never got anything like that in my life, after that time. The ammunition supply was also very bad. If you went to a distance, you couldn't take much. I had two German hand grenades. You had ammunition rather than food. If I had ammunition, I felt safer. Now shoes: I used to go barefoot in the field. You didn't wear that. You had to get everything yourself. There was no one to give you anything. The commander would give you material... The army was supplied, but we weren't. When we went to get flour for the mill, we had to walk a long way and carry it back on our backs. Once we captured two Germans and they had to carry it up there. They were SS men. Then they executed them."

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We all fought for the Czechoslovak Republic and against Nazism

With guerrilla badge
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zdroj: archiv pamětníka

Ján Rišian was born on 22 April 1928 in Slovakia in the village of Ivančina near Martin. His father worked as a mechanical locksmith, and in 1919, as a volunteer, he intervened against the communist Slovak Republic. When the witness was twelve years old, his mother died. He soon left home to attend forestry school and soon began working at Martin‘s as a forestry trainee. Here he also came into contact with the partisan movement, with whose participants he had been acquainted since 1943, when he was fifteen years old. He joined the partisan ranks in 1944, shortly before the outbreak of the Slovak National Uprising, in the village of Sklabiňa in the surroundings of Veľká Fatra. After a short training, he joined the fighting of the Slovak National Uprising, in the detachment he experienced the liberation of the Rajec valley, the retreat to the Kunerad valley and the final defeat and mixing of the detachments after the end of the uprising. As a man very familiar with the terrain thanks to his former work in the local forests, he was often used by the commanders as a liaison between the troops, but he also went through a number of classic combat actions, for example, participated in the disruption of railway lines. During the war, he also managed to rescue two men, a fellow soldier of Jewish descent whom he had hidden with his parents, and a wounded man whom he had supported during the long night retreat to the base. He was also intensely aware of events related to the partisan way of life itself. He was deeply impressed, for example, by the executions he witnessed, the removal of collaborators, German spies sent among the partisans, or even the partisans themselves who committed unacceptable disorders. Immediately after the war, he began studying at the military academy and remained in the ranks of the army until 1980, when he retired. In 2018, he was living in the Home for War Veterans in Carlsbad.