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Jewish Survivor Eva Eiseman Testimony | USC Shoah Foundation

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  • čas přidán 19. 08. 2024
  • You are watching Eva Eiseman, a Jewish Holocaust survivor. To learn more about Eva and explore the stories of other Holocaust survivors and witnesses, visit vhaonline.usc.edu.
    These videos are brought to you by USC Shoah Foundation, which was founded by Steven Spielberg in 1994. The Institute preserves video testimonies of 55,000+ genocide survivors, witnesses, liberators, and others. Each video testimony has been indexed with specific terms, names, places, and dates. Click here to explore the Visual History Archive: vhaonline.usc.edu.
    Learn more about USC Shoah Foundation: sfi.usc.edu/
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    Website: sfi.usc.edu/
    About USC Shoah Foundation:
    USC Shoah Foundation - The Institute for Visual History and Education develops
    empathy, understanding and respect through testimony, using its Visual History Archive of more than 55,000 video testimonies, academic programs and partnerships across USC and 170 universities, and award-winning IWitness education program. USC Shoah Foundation’s interactive programming, research and materials are accessed in museums and universities, cited by government leaders and NGOs, and taught in classrooms around the world. Now in its third decade, USC Shoah Foundation reaches millions of people on six continents from its home at the University of Southern California.
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Komentáře • 26

  • @user-br5ul2gm9y
    @user-br5ul2gm9y Před 10 měsíci +2

    What a remarkable woman! Thank you.

  • @Christine5000
    @Christine5000 Před 9 lety +20

    Lovely sweet family. It just boggles my mind people wanted to destroy that. Thank you for your story.

  • @basialaufman6365
    @basialaufman6365 Před měsícem +1

    thank you for sharing your wonderful story, and your hugging at the end of the interview made me tear up. Thank you again❤,
    may you and yours always be blessed❤

  • @tinaloveseddie
    @tinaloveseddie Před 6 lety +9

    I love the story of how she met her husband... Love at first sight! She truly led a remarkable life.💞

  • @raulianes7272
    @raulianes7272 Před 2 lety +3

    Loved what she says about Uruguay, my country!

  • @31Shanell
    @31Shanell Před 21 dnem

    I cried listening. I wish I could help her with this pain.

  • @samanthabernhardt3123
    @samanthabernhardt3123 Před 10 lety +16

    thats my old best friends grandma

  • @MicrobyteAlan
    @MicrobyteAlan Před 8 lety +2

    Hi, thanks for sharing. I'm a Boston jew, living now in Orlando. I lived in Germany 1992-96.

  • @tinaloveseddie
    @tinaloveseddie Před 6 lety +5

    Oh gosh... the group hug at the end😭

  • @chuckbus
    @chuckbus Před rokem +1

    What a beautiful family! Oh how she loves her husband, a rare thing to see a happy fulfilled woman!

  • @victoriasmith815
    @victoriasmith815 Před 2 lety +3

    Lovely woman, fortunate life I feel that God blessed them. Took my breath away during story of the speech. Yes it can happen again unfortunately prejudice lives but so does love ❤️

  • @annebalderston2520
    @annebalderston2520 Před 2 lety

    When she says, “We did what we could” the
    interviewer should have asked her for specifics.

  • @barbarawright3319
    @barbarawright3319 Před 2 lety +1

    The sound is so low

  • @sandyhossman7771
    @sandyhossman7771 Před 4 lety +3

    A remarkable women

  • @debrajarnagin7101
    @debrajarnagin7101 Před 2 lety +2

    She is a pretty woman

  • @RoseMary-vs3io
    @RoseMary-vs3io Před 7 lety +2

    What was the point of this there is no story here.

    • @jankench9622
      @jankench9622 Před 3 lety +8

      oh yes there is, that despite Hitler and the Nazis that some families did escape.

    • @gyorgyakos9618
      @gyorgyakos9618 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jankench9622 So did my father and mother and older brother, who emigrated from Hungary in 1940 to Uruguay. They lived in Montevideo till 1948 when they returned to Hungary. They survived and I was born in 1949.

    • @RD-0101
      @RD-0101 Před 2 lety

      @@gyorgyakos9618
      They've return to the communist Hungary?!?😳 Why would anyone want to live in communism?!?

    • @gyorgyakos9618
      @gyorgyakos9618 Před 2 lety +1

      @@RD-0101 People are different. They have different beliefs and convictions. My parents were communist symphatisers before the war. (There were many such people, believe it or not.) There were others who came back (I knew some of them, very nice people) while others (like my uncle) stayed in South America. Also, my father's parents remained in Budapest. (My mother's mother died a week after the Budapest ghetto was liberated.) Anyways, after about 1948 the borders were closed (iron curtain) and you could not leave Hungary anymore, should you have changed yourt mind. (My parents did not,).

  • @alonsosevilla2301
    @alonsosevilla2301 Před rokem

    The confused stem inevitably approve because half-brother intraperitonally breathe apud a fixed august. brave, capable flower