I wanted to play my own game
Jan Sláma was born on 16 June 1956 in Brno as the first child of Milada and František Sláma. His grandfather František Sláma, inspired by Tomáš Baťa, built a construction company, a cement factory, a sawmill and a timber shop in Boskovice during the First Czechoslovak Republic. After 1948 his entire property was nationalized and his father František Sláma Jr. had to leave Boskovice and start a new life in Brno, where they lived in a loft apartment after the birth of their son Jan. In 1968, tragedy struck the family when Jan‘s seven-year-old sister Renata died after a serious illness. He himself witnessed the arrival of tanks in Brno during the occupation by Warsaw Pact troops. He was even more intensely affected by the intervention of the armed forces during the demonstrations in the centre of Brno in August 1969. He graduated from grammar school, rowed competitively and was a member of the junior national team. In 1980, he completed his studies at the Faculty of Civil Engineering with a focus on bridge construction. He worked in the Brnoprojekt and Silnice Brno and soon got into a management position. He refused the offer of membership in the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Thanks to his work on the construction of the Masaryk Circuit in Brno, he remained in office despite not being a member of the Party. He was actively involved in the events after 17 November 1989 and was offered the post of Deputy Minister of Construction. It was only after the revolution that he gradually learned about the history of his grandfather‘s business in Boskovice, settled restitution claims and decided to reopen the family business. From his first marriage he has a daughter Markéta (1980), a son Tomáš (1983) and currently (2023) he lives in Boskovice with his second wife Eva.