I was born on 1879 in Ulm, Württemberg, Germany, and died in April 18, 1955, in Princeton, New Jersey. I am a Jewish man, born and raised Jewish, and will remain Jewish forever more. I lived with my father, Hermann Eisntein, who had founded Elektrotechnische Fabrik J. Einstein & Cie, which had manufactured Electronic products in Munich. My mother, Pauline Koch, ran the house, and ruled over me and my sister Maja, born 2 years after myself.
In 1899, our family invited a poor polish medical student, Max Tumuld, to our house for supper every Thursday. Max practically became my personal tutor, enlightening my mind to the higher mathematics and philosophies. Later, I wrote my first paper, “The Investigation of Aether in Magnetic Fields” at the age of 16.
In 1894 my fathers company failed to get an important contract to electrify the city of Munich, and was forced to move to move to Milan in Italy, leaving me in a foster house to finish my schooling in a Roman Catholic church school. Once, my father asked the school principal what I should consider doing when I grow up, and my principal simply said, “It doesn't matter. Albert will never make a success of himself at anything”.
Later in the school year, Max moved away, and now I was lonely and I hated school more than ever. I had never looked up to my teachers, but by that time I had grown openly disrespectful, not just inside, and 6 months into the school year, I explained many of my thoughts to and about the teachers, for example the idea that “unthinking respect for authority, is the greatest enemy of the truth”, and was replied with insults like being called “a lazy dog”, while other teachers said that I was a bad influence on the other students, and the end result was me getting kicked out of school.
After that happened, I made my way back to my parents in Milan. Fortunately, I was able to instantly apply to the Swiss Federal Polytechnic School, but failed in most parts, while acing the physics and mathematics section. They accepted me, but told me to catch up in the other parts in a high school at Aarau, Switzerland, after which I had graduated in 1896. After that, I renounced my German citizenship so that I didn’t have to join the army.
I graduated the Polytechnic School in the 1900s, and was all set to become a physics teacher like I wanted, but I couldn’t find a teaching job, so I ended up working at a Swiss Patent Office, where I got to look through other people ideas, see if it was an original, then patent it so no one could copy it. I was so good at my job that I almost always finished early, and I had lots of time to think, and during that thinking, “a storm broke loose in my mind”, and In one year alone I published 5 groundbreaking papers. One of my theories was the fact that time was also a dimension, and an important one at that.
I eventually married Meliva in 1903, and had our son, Hans. 2 years later I came out with my theory of relativity.
Also later I shocked a lot of other professors in another one of my papers, which stated that everything in our solar system is moving, not just the planets, not just the galaxies, not just the universe, I also claimed that light bent as it traveled.
I later came up with my most famous formula, E=MC2. E=MC2 is the idea that when a small amount of matter is changed into energy, a lot of energy will be released. The E stands for energy, the M for Mass, and the C for the speed of light, and the formula states that Energy is the Byproduct of mass times itself multiplied into itself twice.
Later, I was invited to an institute in Burlin, Germany, But Mileva didn’t want to go to Germany, for she didn’t like the government, the people, and the fact that it was the main point of attack from all countries at the moment. So I left Mileva and worked at the institute in Berlin.
In Berlin, I came up with the idea that light doesn't just bend in space, it curves along the way. After another eclipse, I was proven right, and I was instantly famous. I moved into a bigger house, a slightly remote one so I could be alone to think, sadly, that didn’t work out so well.
After the Nazis took over Germany, it was hard for me to stay in Germany. My second wife, Elsa, and my friends and family asked me to leave Germany, for Nazis hate Jews, Intellectuals, and Pacifists, and I’m all the above. By 1930 I was done with my best scientific theories, and I was more worried about politics and public speaking, which made the Nazis even angrier, but It was hard for them to arrest me, because I’m a Swedish citizen, and the Swedish are a peace loving country, making it even harder to be arrested for it had to go by the Swedish first.
I did take many vacations to friendly countries. In Japan, my arrival was a national holiday, and in Spain I was greeted by the King, which was a surprising privilege. Later the Nazis published a book called “100 authors against Einstein”, and all I said was “why 100, If I were wrong, only one would be enough".
Soon enough the Nazis weren’t just a small band of haters, they were huge, and Jews were being murdered, but by that time me and my wife were in California as a guest professor. While still unaware of the Jew Killing, Hitler declared me a traitor and put out a death warrant for me. On our way home, the Nazis broke into my house, using a bread knife in my kitchen as “proof” that I was dangerous, and they took all that I owned. I got word of what was happening and turned around to live in Belgium. We were being looked for , we moved to America, where I get paid $1600 as a salary in the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. Three years later Elsa passed away, with me ending up lonely, heartbroken, with suffering health. Afterwords, all I did was try to stop the Nazis. I played the violin at fund raising concerts, and sent a letter to F.D.R. concerning the possibility of the first Atom Bomb to be used against the Nazis. I later died in 1948.