Branislav Tvarožek
Branislav Tvarožek is a Slovak anti-Nazi resistance participant and former political prisoner.
Biography
Early life and anti-Nazi resistance
Branislav Tvarožek was born on 2 December 1925 in the predominantly Hungarian village of Lok in Levice District. He was educated for the first two years by Slovak language school built by his parents in his village. Afterwards, the family moved to the village He grew up in the village of Brezová pod Bradlom, close to Moravia, where the influence of the Czechoslovak Legion was very strong. His uncle, the architect Juraj Tvarožek was a member of the Legion.Tvarožek was 14 years old when Czechoslovakia dissolved in March 1939 and the Slovak State was established. At the time, Tvarožek was already as a secondary school student in Bratislava. He engaged in small acts of resistance against the wartime authoritarian regime. Together with classmates he painted over swastikas and distributed anti-Nazi and anti-Tiso leaflets. He was caught by a German patrol and subsequently expelled from school. After his expulsion, he moved to Nové Mesto nad Váhom, where his father ran a business.
In 1944, during the Second World War, Tvarožek joined the Slovak National Uprising. He served as a guard for the uprising’s key military leaders, generals Ján Golian and Rudolf Viest, together with his cousin Živodar Tvarožek. After the collapse of the uprising and capture of Golian and Viest, Tvarožek was stranded with the remains of the resistance forces commanded by general Ludvík Svoboda and eventually captured by German forces. He avoided being shot by persuading German soldiers in fluent German that his comrade’s uniform had mismatched Russian buttons only because his clothing had burned. His knowledge of German later helped him avoid deportation to a POW camp, after convincing a doctor to classify him among the wounded. After escaping from a military hospital together with a Jewish detainee, he traveled in borrowed civilian clothes home to Nové Mesto nad Váhom, where he and his father Eduard Tvarožek assisted local partisans.