In 1956, Jan Beneš was recruited to the
paratroop unit and served his obligatory military service. In the end of this service, in 1958, he was arrested and sentenced to 25 months for undermining of combat moral of the troops, interference with political education of the troops, illegal arming, and stealing military underwear. He served this sentence mostly in
uranium mine
Bytiz in
Příbram region. This experience was a real eye-opener for a young son of a career officer. Jan Beneš wrote Second Breath, a book about this communistic concentration camp, in 1963. Ideological Department of the ÚV KSČ (Central Committee of the
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia) banned its publication in 1964. Finally it was published in the United States by Orion Press N.Y. in 1969. During the sixties, while he was working as a stage technician in the Prague Puppet Theatre, he managed to publish novels
Do vrabců jako když střelí (Shooting into the Sparrows) and
Situace (Situations). Jan Beneš started to write for exile magazine
Svědectví (Testimony). Book of novels
Disproporce (Disproportion) was published in 1965, but banned because of his upcoming arrest. His family was expelled from the officer's house because of action B–Bourgeoisie. The family lived in a squat in
Prague, close to the river
Vltava. In 1966, Jan Beneš married Šárka Šefranková. After collecting more than 300 signatures on a petition against the imprisonment of the Russian writers
Sinyavski and Daniel, he was held 11 months in custody. He was arrested ten days after the wedding, for the crime of treason - subversion of the socialistic social and state system, and an attempt for deceit. According to H Schwarz's
200 Days in Prague, the ill-famed trial
Tigrid–Beneš–Zámečník, and involvement of the head of the state and the Communistic Party in fact launched the events of the Prague Spring. Lawyer of the
Amnesty International, Dr. Sieghart, was expelled from Czechoslovakia during Beneš's trial. Pregnant Sarka was brutally interrogated by the StB. Pressure on the family was immense. Beneš was sentenced for 5 years in prison, but was released on 22 March 1968, due to the amnesty of president
Novotný, as the last political prisoner in Czechoslovakia. In 1968, after the
Soviet invasion, Jan and Šárka Beneš emigrated from Czechoslovakia to France. They returned in January 1969, during the
Palach's week, to support the public resistance against the Soviet invasion. In October 1969, after massive wave of emigration, Czechoslovak government eventually invalidated all passports and closed the borders. Jan Beneš was informed that he would be arrested again.
My Father did not Fall for Anything,
Triangle with Madonna, and
After you slept with me you will cry were published at this time. Jan Beneš worked in various
blue-collar jobs, for example in crane maintenance for Danly Machine Corporation, before he became a Research Fellow in International House at
Harvard University in 1972. After the beginning of the War in Vietnam Jan Beneš tried to join the US Armed Forces, but was refused as too old for regular service. In 1974 he started to work for the Department of Defense, the Defense Language Institute, at Foreign Language Center in
Monterey,
California, as a teacher of
Czech language, geography and history. He went through all the training with the
Green Berets as a volunteer and participated in many missions, mostly abroad. After the
Velvet Revolution, Jan Beneš returned to Czechoslovakia. In 1992, it was too late to influence the chain of events after the series of too velvet takeovers, because the handover of power was already done. Jan Bene published his principal books such as
Crime of Genocide,
Indolence,
American Causerie,
Marked by Darkness,
Dead is My Godmother, and
Time smells by Dreams. In his life, he had published almost 3000 articles in various newspapers. Jan Beneš never gave up his work for democracy and freedom. His, ill-famed detention in March 2001 and subsequent trial with BIS officer
Vladimír Hučín, became the breaking point, where Czech justice system was tested.
Sir Martin Gilbert mentioned Jan Beneš' influence on the events during the
Prague Spring and formation of Czechoslovak dissent in his “History of the Twentieth Century” . == References ==