They will hang your dad like they did to Mr. Slánský
Eva Štěpánková was born on April 23, 1948 in Prague. Her father Jan Bárta was originally called Jen Braunstein and came from an Orthodox Jewish family from Subcarpathian Ukraine. Her mother Marie Fisher came from Budapest, where her parents met at the end of the war. The mother avoided transports to the concentration camps, the father lived in Budapest under a false identity. As an ardent communist, he offered his services to the Soviets. Both parents settled in Prague after the war. Her father worked his way up to the position of a party deputy of the state-owned company České energetické závody. He was arrested on November 22, 1952 and convicted of high treason in 1954. That same year, Eva went to first grade, remembering the visits to her father in prison. Her father was released on amnesty in 1960, his university degree was taken away from him, and he had to go to work as a maintenance worker in a factory. After three years, he underwent rehabilitation. The occupation of 1968 caught a witness on holiday in Romania. The witness’s father and brothers traveled to Vienna, the brothers soon returned home, and the father did not return until 1969. The parents got divorced, and the father was expelled from the Communist Party for the second time. Eva graduated from the Faculty of Mathematics and Physics of Charles University and in 1971 she joined the Research Institute of Mathematical Machines (VÚS), where she spent twenty years. She got married in 1975 and had gradually three children. She was widowed in 2007.