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Pavel Sigalov, son of Samoil Sigalov and Berta (Bela) Raitsyna Sigalova, was born in Moscow, USSR, on December 29, 1929 but was raised from age five in Ukraine. He passed away at age 95 in Laramie, Wyoming on January 8, 2025.
Pavel’s parent’s had left Ukraine for Moscow before he was born, but they returned to Ukraine in the 1930s to begin a new life. In 1940 they were living 20 miles from the border of a divided Poland when Hitler invaded the Soviet Union to take the rich black soil lands of Ukraine and southern Russia. Pavel was eleven years old when – on a quickly commissioned freight train – he, his mother, and brother Jacob fled a rapidly advancing Nazi army. His father was immediately engaged in the war effort, so Pavel became the de facto man of the house. Mother and sons followed a long, treacherous road to the southern town of Kurtamysh in Kurgan Province where they lived through war, drought, and famine.
In the early 1950s, Pavel graduated from the Pedagogical Institute of Cherkassy, Ukraine and took up his first high school teaching post in a small Ukrainian village, Verbovetz, a five mile walk (or horse cart ride) from the nearest railroad line. It was an idyllic two years in pristine countryside with good, salt-of-the-earth people who cared for him as he for their children. After that experience he enrolled in the graduate program in Slavic Linguistics at Leningrad State University. In the early 1960s, with his doctoral degree in hand, he began a highly successful academic career at Tartu State University in Estonia (with two stints in Krakow, Poland as a visiting faculty member). He and his wife Natalia had one daughter, Tatiana Sigalova, who is a poet, artist, and scholar. He worked at Tartu University for approximately eighteen years and, upon the death of his mother, Pavel submitted an emigration application to permanently depart the Soviet Union. In punishment for this act, Pavel was fired immediately from his position at the university. He arrived in Texas where his younger brother Jacob was living and moved on to San Francisco where he began seeking university employment. His search brought him to the University of Wyoming in 1983 where he worked in the Russian section of the Department of Modern and Classical Languages (with volunteer stints teaching Russian history in the History Department as well). He took two years leave when he was invited to teach Slavic comparative linguistics at Harvard University. Although he was asked to remain at Harvard, Pavel was eager to return to his American hometown of Laramie, where he would exclaim from the Vedauwoo rocks, “This is the real America!” He was a devoted teacher and a prolific scholar at the University of Wyoming until the fine age of 83.
Pavel was both serious and jovial. His life was filled with music and books, swimming and karate, excursions to the mountains, and warm gatherings with family and friends. He spoke many languages and traveled extensively to experience the larger world.
Pavel is survived by his beloved daughter Tatiana Sigalova (Tartu, Estonia), his younger brother Jack and Sofia Sigaloff (South Carolina), cherished cousins spread across three continents, and countless students, colleagues, and friends. At Pavel’s request, cremation has taken place. There will be a private interment of cremains in the Laramie Jewish Community Center’s section of Greenhill Cemetery. So, raise a glass to a man whose life was unusually long and incredibly rich. May his memory be a blessing. Donations in Pavel’s honor can be given to the Department of Modern and Classical Languages at the University of Wyoming.
My Condolences to Pavel's family. I knew him for over 20 years and he will be greatly missed.
I became Pavel's personal sensei (karate instructor) sometime around 1992. Pavel joined the UW Campus Shorin-Ryu Karate & Kobudo Club, and was a member for more than a decade. Pavel explained that he had an interest in martial arts, but the communist regime in the USSR would not allow him to learn to defend himself! So, when he saw that the university offered classes, training, clinics and club activities in karate and kobudo, he quickly signed up. Pavel was awarded 'shodan yudansha' (1st degree black belt in Shorin-Ryu karate) on April 4th, 2004. Believe it or not, he had the fastest hands of anyone in the club, much faster than most of our 17 to 40+ year old members. When we scheduled group photos for the club with the UW photo service in the early years, we found Pavel hiding behind the back roll of members; which I assume may have had something to do with conflicts or paranoia of the communist regime in Moscow and/or Estonia. He told me one day that he had reached a point where he couldn't handle the communist bureaucracy anymore and applied to emigrate from the Soviet Union. He was placed under house arrest for such a crime, and for the next 6 years, he depended on others to keep him alive since he could not leave his abode. After 6 years, the regime took him to court and he did not know if he would go to the work camps in Siberia, or be kicked out of the USSR. Luckily for Wyoming, they kicked him out. This was apparently a common occurrence, since another friend of mine and co-author on a book about diamond deposits, told me that he too was kicked out of the USSR after serving 6 years of house arrest. Pavel, my good friend, I pray for your soul. You are a dear friend and I greatly miss you. God bless you.
I had the honor of meeting this great man many years ago at the University of Wyoming. He was a wonderful asset to the diversity of the university. May he rest in peace!
I am so sad to hear of Pavel’s passing. He was a much-admired colleague at the University of Wyoming, fellow member of the LJCC, and a beloved friend. May his memory be for a blessing! Sending his family and friends all my love.
My Sincere Condolences to his daughter, brother and the rest of his family. He was a treasure to the University of Wyoming. May he Rest in Peace!