When I joined the Communist Party in 1965, I thought that these were the people I could belong to
Jaroslav Kubínek was born on May 3, 1940 in Pardubice, in a family of refugees, who moved out from Slovakia. He studied electrical engineering in Pardubice and later, remotely, agricultural economics at the University of Economics, and completed his political education in a postgraduate course on technical development at the University of Politics. After military service, he joined Tesla Přelouč and later Chemoprojekt in Pardubice as a project architect assistant. He joined the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) in 1965. From May 1967 until the end of October 1968 he was an employee of the Regional Administration of the Ministry of the Interior. On November 1, 1968, Jaroslav Kubínek got married and at the same time changed jobs and joined Agra Přelouč. From 1975 to 1978 he worked as a political worker at Tesla Pardubice and from there he moved to the Regional Committee of the Communist Party in Hradec Králové. He stayed there for nine years. In 1987, he accepted the position of the chief secretary of the central committee of the Communist Party in Pardubice, and in this position, he was influenced by the November events of the Velvet Revolution. He terminated in the Communist Party’s apparatus as a paid employee on the last day of 1989. In the following years he was employed in an agricultural cooperative as a businessman, economic adviser and later as a liquidator, until his retirement. He remained loyal to the Communist Party and is currently a member of the KSČM.