Correction Cell for Believing in God
During his imprisonment in work camp, Eliáš Rudolf Duda, being a member of the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, refused to work on Saturdays, because his church considers Saturdays to be holy days. “During the morning roll-call they were reading out the names of those who were supposed to work. The last name thy read was mine! So I told them that I wasn’t going to work. Then I turned around and ran back to the barracks. The guard followed me screaming: ‘What are you doing? Everyone is going. If you don’t go, you get the correction cell.’ So that was how I got to know the correction cell at Eliáš. It was a concrete dungeon with tiny windows. When they put me in, it was dark and moist. There were pipes on the ground and on the ceiling; I hardly squeezed through there. I lay down, and although I was tired, I couldn’t get much sleep. In the morning they took me out. It had been snowing, everything was white and that was really hard for my eyes. I staggered and fell down. The guard hit me, so I got up and we started to walk. Then all of a sudden he told me: ‘Go to the right! Out of the camp!’ But I didn’t move. ‘I’m not allowed to go there,’ I said. He started to swear and to hit me, and then opened the door and we entered the building for the guards. We went to the washroom and he screamed at me: ‘Clean the sinks!’ But I didn’t move; I just stood there. So he caught me and started to throw me to the left and to the right. I was careful not to fall down on my head. Then all of a sudden, the camp commander appeared. He ordered me to go out and just let me stand there while he was yelling at the guard.”
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