Steven (originally István) Vajda was born in
Budapest in 1901, to Josef and Aurelia Wollak. His family moved to
Vienna in 1903, and it was in this city that Steven was raised and educated. He read mathematics and received a Dr. Phil. Degree in 1925 from the
University of Vienna. One of his first appointments was in Romania where he was an actuarial advisor to the Romanian government. He eventually returned to Vienna to continue his work as an actuary and was married there in 1929. In 1939, Steven, wife Eva and their two children, Hedy and Robert, fled the Nazi regime that had taken over Austria in the 1938
Anschluss. The children were sent to Sweden and Eva was admitted to the UK as a domestic servant. Steven’s friend
Karl Popper had already left Austria and, as a
New Zealand resident and lecturer in philosophy at
Canterbury University College, he found Steven a job and helped him to obtain the necessary travel documents. Steven was then able to enter England because he was merely in transit. The plan was to reunite the family in England and then leave for New Zealand, but before that could happen, the
Second World War started and the Vajdas were briefly interned as "enemy aliens". They were housed in a camp on the
Isle of Man with other refugees from across Europe. The internees organized a school for their children and, of course, Steven taught mathematics. Most of the internees were released after several months and Steven found employment as an actuary. ==Career in the United Kingdom==