Try to always tell the truth and stand by your word, be brave and always help when you can
Pavel Kaiser was born on April 4, 1939 in Bratislava in a mixed Jewish-Christian family of civil engineer Gabriel Kaiser and mother Vlasta. Paternal grandfather Jozef was a doctor in Topolčianky and came from a Jewish family from the village of Semerovo near Nové Zámky. Grandmother Alica, born Perl, came from Zlaté Moravce from the family of the dentist Antal. Pavel’s mother Vlasta came from Pardubice from the family of train driver František Reinberg. She met Pavel’s father during his military service and they got married in 1937. In 1941, Pavel’s younger brother Peter was born. Until the uprising in 1944, they lived in Banská Bystrica, from where they moved to Piešťany. After the uprising was suppressed, the mother had to hide her two children in a barn with a nearby peasant family, where they stayed until the end of the war in April 1945. During the Holocaust, the father hid in Moravia, and when he returned after the liberation, they moved again as a complete family to Bratislava. Pavel’s sister Gabriela was born there in 1948, and Pavel’s youngest sibling is sister Hanka. Pavel went to an eleven-year high school, where he graduated in 1956. He continued his studies at the Faculty of Technical and Nuclear Physics in Prague. After graduating from university, Pavel got his first job at the Nuclear Power Plant in the village of Vochov near Pilsen. In 1962, he married his wife Jana. He then worked at the Energy Research Institute in Prague and after a year got a job at the Jaslovské Bohunice Nuclear Power Plant. In 1969, brother Peter emigrated with his family to the West. Pavel was dismissed from the post of head of the department and he was also expelled from the ROH. At that time, a new UN computing center was established at Patrónka, where Pavel found a new professional application. He worked here until 1988.