Unsuccessful Border Crossing
The communist regime didn’t allow Ján Brichta to become a priest, therefore, he tried to reach his only dream behind the Czechoslovak borders. Along with a group of students, as well as some older priests, on the morning of April 8, 1951, he began to march towards the nearby Austrian borders. Heavy rain made their day-long journey very unpleasant. The strenuous march in muddy terrain was a big obstacle precisely for the older priests. Brichta recalled: “The older priests started to faint. Therefore two of us, the young students, I remember it was Jožko Bazal, my older schoolmate with me back then, we took one priest under his arms and said: ‘Father, just hold on! We are near the borders!’” However, they came to the river Morava with few hours delay: “When we arrived at the embankment, it was already a daybreak. We had to decide whether to proceed or to return.” It was really difficult to search for a good spot of river crossing because of swollen watercourse and many damaged trees. “We were afraid that if sailing in the dinghy, it could easily impale on the ends of fallen branches, this way it could blow out and that would be even worse. We, the younger ones, decided to cross, but the older men beseeched us: ‘Please, don’t go. We shall die here, that’s our end!’ And since compassion is compassion and life is life as well, we chose to go back,” he recalled. On their way, however, majority of the group was detained by members of the Border Guard. Instead of being able to study as he so desired, Ján experienced months of tough interrogations in a remand centre, and a trial in which he was sentenced to fifteen years of imprisonment. For the vast majority of his sentence he worked in mines of the Jáchymov labour camp.
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