Father spent several years in uranium camps in the area of Jáchymov
Tomáš Cahel was born on 1 August 1963 in Poteč near Valašské Klobouky as the oldest of seven children. His parents had a farm. His dad Josef Cahel, a deeply religious man, helped restore a local unit of the Orel movement after the war. In 1950, he was together with members of the resistance organization Světlana-Makyta sentenced in a public trial to serve twenty years in prison. He was in custody in Uherské Hradiště and also in uranium mines in the area of Jáchymov and Příbram. He returned home after the amnesty in 1960. He married Anděla Macků in 1962. Tomáš Cahel trained to be a repairer of agricultural machinery, he worked at State Farm in Valašské Klobouky from 1981 to 1994. He passed his secondary school-leaving exam at the Secondary School of Agriculture in Kroměříž while employed. He and his family became active in Salesian Movement, and he took part in so-called “cabins” (summer camps – trans.) during normalization, he later participated also as an assistant and (camp) leader. He married Marie Nevrlková in 1988. He co-organized demonstrations in Valašské Klobouky in 1989. After the revolution, he was active in the restoration of the Czechoslovak People‘s Party and ran for the municipal council. He and his brother restored the family farm in 1994. Since 2005 he works at the parish office in Valašské Klobouky as a technical administrator of the deanery. He and his wife raised four children. In 2022, at the time of recording, he lived in his family home in Poteč.