Ľudo Ondrejov

Ľudo Ondrejov

Ľudo Ondrejov, Slovak poet and writer
Born (1901-10-19)October 19, 1901
Slanje, present day Croatia
Died March 18, 1962(1962-03-18) (aged 60)
Bratislava, Czechoslovakia, present day Slovakia
Occupation Author
Nationality Slovak

Ľudo Ondrejov (October 19, 1901 in Slanje, present day Croatia – March 18, 1962 in Bratislava, Czechoslovakia) was a Slovak poet and prose writer.

Biography

Ľudo Ondrejov was born in a Slovak family in Slanje (today part of Donji Martijanec, Croatia) on March 18, 1901. He spent most of his childhood in Slovakia in a small village Kostiviarska (today part of Banská Bystrica). He moved to Bratislava in 1938 and became a professional writer. Ľudo Ondrejov was a member of a partisan group in 1944–45. During the World War II he was given a bookstore as a part of the Aryanization in Slovakia.

Works

Writing career

Ondrejov's first works were published in periodicals such as Slovenské pohľady (Slovak views). His first book was published in 1932. He wrote prose and poetry for adults and children. Ondrejov was a significant member of the Slovak school of naturalism. Ondrejov also wrote fictional travelogues.

List of selected works

Poetry

Prose

Criticism

During the Second World War árizoval secondhand Jewish families of Steiner in Bratislava . Moreover, when it was started with the deportation of Jews, said that in his company no Jew need be reported and authorities:

" I declare that, in its bookstore do not need these Jews: Max Steiner, Joseph Steiner, Sigismund Steiner and Steiner, Viliam. Odtransportovaním and making sure those Jews suffer trade or Slovak state under no economic loss because I have found a replacement in the person of Mr Viliam árijskej Fabry from the Turks. St. Martin's . "

These people later died in concentration camps . [1][2]

References

Template:Překlad

  1. Martin Trančík: Medzi Starým a Novým (História kníhkupeckej rodiny Steinerovcov v Bratislave), ISBN 80-967026-9-6, Bratislava 1997
  2. Slovenské dotyky, október 2005


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 20, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.