Prof. PhDr. Koloman Gajan, DrSc.
http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/instantiations/cz-002286-1967-eng-1967_eng an entity of type: Instantiation
Prof. PhDr. Koloman Gajan, DrSc.
The historian, a participant in the domestic anti-fascist resistance, Prof. Koloman Gajan (original name Koloman Edelmann), was born on 7 November 1918 in the eastern Slovak village of Hamborek into an orthodox Jewish family. He graduated from a high school in Brno in the school year of 1939/1940. In the spring of 1942, he escaped to Slovakia before being transported to Terezín. In the beginning of 1943, he accepted a position in Prešov under the code name Ján Gajan as an accountant and correspondent at the company Sväz východoslovenské drevopriemyslu, družstvo s.r.o., whose director was Karol Miklánek, one of the co-founders of the partisan group Čapajev. After a short stint at Sväz, he became involved in the activities of an illegal resistance group. His activity consisted mainly in procuring weapons, clothing and medicines for the members of the partisan group Čapajev, and in procuring identity cards for illegal workers. He saved the lives of many people, and on 21 December 1944, he was arrested in Prešov on a tip-off from a Gestapo confidant, J. Wintner. He was in six concentration camps, namely, Sachsehausen, Bergen-Belsen, Kaufering, Landsberg, Lauingen, and Allach. His parents and six siblings did not survive the war, and he repeatedly saved himself by using the false identity of Gajan. As a reminder, he kept this surname after the end of the war. After the war, he settled in Prague, joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (1945-1969), studied history and Romance studies at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University, and worked as a researcher at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University. He was interested in modern Central European and French political history and Czech-German relations. After the Soviet occupation, he was expelled from the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia and for the next twenty years he, like his wife, was forbidden to pursue an academic career. He published works under the names of his colleagues and taught foreign languages. After 1989, he returned to the Faculty of Arts and focused on the personality and work of T. G. Masaryk. He also participated in the revival of the Masaryk Society. He died on 27 December 2011 in Prague.
Prof. PhDr. Koloman Gajan, DrSc.