Rainer Höss and Eva Mozes Kor
At that point, the ten-year-old made a silent pledge to herself to prove Mengele wrong and reunite with her sister—a promise she fulfilled through sheer determination. "I don't know where that will came from," she told me recently. "I felt that if I gave up for a single moment, I would die."Now 80 years old, Eva has become an advocate for forgiveness, making peace with everyone who's ever hurt her, including the Nazis. Most astoundingly, she has informally adopted Rainer Höss—grandson of Rudolf, the SS commander of Auschwitz during the time she was imprisoned there—as her own grandson.Eva and her sister were born in Romania on New Year's Eve, 1934, to a family of Jewish farmers. Six years later, her village was occupied by Hungarian Nazis and her life changed forever. Her father, Alexander, was hassled for being Jewish, and her mother, Jaffa, got sick. Meanwhile, local kids were encouraged to call Eva and her sister "dirty Jews."The family were taken to a Jewish ghetto at the beginning of 1944, and in May of that year they were slung into a cattle car bound for Auschwitz. The conditions were awful: countless crying souls crammed into a van, oppressive heat making the lack of food and water during the 70-hour journey even more unbearable.Eva recalled the moment the doors opened up: "When we arrived at Auschwitz we asked for water, but instead we got Germans yelling orders. I looked around, and just like that, my father and two older sisters [Edit and Aliz] disappeared in the crowd. I held on to my mother for dear life. I thought she could protect us."
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The entrance to Auschwitz. Photo by Logaritmo via Wikimedia Commons
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Jewish twins kept alive to be used in Mengele's experiments. Photo courtesy of USHMM/Belarusian State Archive of Documentary Film and Photography via Wikimedia Commons
Female survivors at Auschwitz
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Rudolf Höss at Auschwitz. Photo via