They have not done anything wrong. They just wanted to leave
Avraham Vesely was born as Petr Veselý in Bratislava in May 1948 to Jewish parents who have survived holocaust. His father Samuel Weiss, later renamed Veselý, ran a textile shop. The family moved from Slovakia to Prague soon after Petr’s birth. After the anti-Semitic trial with Rudolf Slánský in 1952 the family attempted to emigrate to Israel, but they were arrested in 1953. They contacted the Israeli embassy in Prague with a request for emigration to Israel. Petr’s father was sentenced to fourteen years of imprisonment for high treason and his mother to four years; she eventually spent three yeas in prison. Five-year-old Petr and his younger brother Juraj, who was eighteen months old when their parents were arrested, were separately placed into children’s homes. Petr Veselý spent four years in several children’s homes in West Bohemia and in the vicinity of Prague. When their mother was released from prison in 1957, she found an apartment in Prague-Smíchov with the assistance from the Israeli embassy and she gradually managed to have both children living with her. Their father was released in amnesty in 1960. After many appeals and petitions, the whole family legally left for Israel in 1964. Petr’s younger brother Juraj began to suffer from a psychological illness due to the experiences from his early childhood and in 1997 he committed suicide. Petr Veselý graduated from economy and he worked in a bank for more than thirty years. He adopted the name Avraham in Israel. He is retired and he lives in Cholon near Tel Aviv.