![]() ![]() Under his influence, young Strauss perceived God more pantheisticly, which gave him a feeling of fear and insecurity. Strauss spent his childhood and student years in the house of his grandfather, Doctor Bartolomej Kux, who was an educated, however sceptical Jew. Finally, from 1956 to 1982, he worked as a surgeon in the State hospital in Nitra. He subsequently worked as a surgeon in Bratislava and from 1946 to 1956 as a head surgeon in Skalica. Before the war ended he had been in a concentration camp in Nováky. Strauss converted to Catholicism from Judaism after a two-year struggle in 1942. He worked as a doctor in Palúdzka and Ružomberok. ![]() From 1938 to 1939 he completed a one-year military service. After passing the „maturita“ he studied medicine in Vienna and finished his studies at the German university in Prague in 1938. Strauss studied at a „gymnazium“ in his birthplace, where he actively worked in the self-educational group of M. Strauss's autobiography, Kolíska dôvery, published in 1994, can be considered as an authentic guidebook through his remarkable life. ( November 2014) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) ![]() Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. ![]()
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