Eva Kor: Surviving the Angel of Death

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this program is presented by university of california television like what you learn visit our website or follow us on Facebook and Twitter to keep up with the latest UC TV programs I don't like this contraption here I'm sorry it's staring me in the face or do I like too many things so what I look ok I want to thank as a Shpongle Family Foundation and the Shpongle family and Leonard and the Jewish Studies program at the University and every single one of you made the effort to come and observe with us yo mashallah my name is Eva Kor I am a survivor of Auschwitz a survivor of medical experiments conductor by dr. Josef Mengele and now that I am 82 years old I am trying to survive old age and I found out that a lot more challenging than I thought my lecture is divided in three parts part one how I survived Auschwitz part two the lessons that I have learned from my survival in part three we are going to open it up to questions answered and then of course we will have book signing and selfies and I don't know what young people wanted a 72 years ago at this time I was crammed in a cattle car with my family there were a hundred people among them my father Alexander Moses age 44 my mother Jaffa 38 my oldest sister Edith 14 Miriam and I who were 10 years my middle sister Elise 12 and Miriam and I who were 10 years old twins I wanted to imagine a crowded hot kettle car with only four little windows at the top for air no provisions whatsoever as it was chugging along the European countries without us knowing where on earth we are being taken four days later the cattle car stopped we heard a lot of Germans yelling orders outside I could see nothing really because those windows were very high but I saw a little patch of gray sky through the barbed oiled windows as soon as we stepped down from the cattle cart onto a cement platform called the selection platform because people were selected to live or to die I didn't know it then my mother grabbed my twin sister and me by the hand we were her youngest children and she hoped somehow as long as she could hold on to us that she Shaam somehow she could protect us everything was moving very fast pushing shoving crying and yelling it was the most confusing place and scary place I have seen I am ten years old I am standing there on the selection platform and in my childish curiosity I looked around trying to figure out what on earth is this place and as I looked around I realized that my father and two older sisters were gone never ever did I see them again now we are holding on to mother's hand even tighter as a Nazi is running yelling in German twins twins we did not volunteer any information we had no idea what worked there he noticed us demanded to know from my mother if we were twins and my mother asked if that was good internachi nodded yes and my mother said yes my mother was pulled to the right we were pulled to the left I never even said goodbye to her but I didn't really understand that this would be the last time we would see her it took a total of 30 minutes and the whole family work on Miriam and I became part of a group of little girls our twins in our group there were certain set of twin girls between the ages of 2 and 16 I am sure that on that long selection platform there were little boy twins 2 to 16 and order our group also had a mother the mother of two seven year old twins and I knew her her name was mrs. Chang Gary she was my mother's friend we were taken in for processing to a processing center with a process that meant that our hair was cut short our dresses were returned was a huge oil painted red cross on the back and we were tattooed as a heated a needle attached to a handle over the flame of the lamp when the needle got hot they dipped it into ink and then they burned into my left arm dot by that the capital letter A - seven zero six three my twin sister Miriam became capital A - 7:06 pork ash which was the only Nazi camp that pursued it inmate I do not know why but that is a way it was then we were taken to our barracks crude and filthy wooden barracks or horse barn they were used for as burns for horses entire the barrack was divided in two with a brick bench and each side of the brick Bank there was a walkway and then the three-story high bunk beds crude filthy Miriam and I were given a bunk bed the bottom and I thought it would be nice after four days being cooked in the cattle car that we might be able to stretch out and sleep but I couldn't sleep and as I was tossing and turning I noticed something big and dark moving on the floor and I counted them when I got to five I jumped up screaming these were the biggest mice I have ever seen a girl from the top bunk bed said silly kid these are not my cell read and better get used to them because they are everywhere so now we couldn't even try to go back to sleep we went to the latrine and as we entered the place there on the filthy latrine floor where the scattered corpses of three children I have never seen anybody dead before but to me it became clear that in this place children were dying and I immediately made a decision that I will do whatever I can whatever is within my power to make sure that Miriam and I shall not end up on that filthy latrine floor people sometimes ask me why didn't I tell Miriam about it it's a good question and as I sawed back about it what would have happened if I said to Miriam Miriam I made the decision you and I will survive and walk out of this camp alive she might have asked me how on earth are you going to do that well of course I didn't know how to survive Auschwitz but now she would have put doubt into my mind from the moment we left a latrine I did everything instinctively and I did everything instinctively right I never let any doubt and fear enter in my mind in our Barrett I want to describe to you how we lived I want you to imagine little girls between the ages of 2 and 16 we were huddled you know filthy bunk beds that were crawling with lice rice was a very big problem and red we were starved for food starvation at Auschwitz was a very big problem I don't even today understand how we survive is a meager supply of food that we got we were starved for human kindness and we were starved for the love of the mothers and fathers we once said we had no right but we had a fierce determination and all we could really concentrated how to survive one more day and how to survive one more experiment I was used in two types of experiments Monday Wednesday and Friday we would be placed naked in a room for eight hours and they would measure just about every part of my body compare it to my twin sister Miriam and then compare it to charts those experiments were not dangerous but even in Auschwitz I had trouble coping with the fact that they treated me like I was a nobody and nothing on alternate days Tuesday certainly and Saturday we would be taken to a lab that I call the blood lab there they would tie both of my arms to restrict the blood flow they would take a lot of blood from my left arm and give me a minimum of five injections into my right arm those were the deadly words after one of those injections I became very ill with a very high fever effect I desperately tried to hide next visit to the blood lab they did not tie my arms for blood taking instead of that they measured my fever and I knew I was in trouble I was taken immediately to the hospital which was another barrack was filled with people who looked more dead than alive dr. Mengele came in next morning was four other doctors he never ever examined me he only looked at my fever chart and then he mmediately said laughing sarcastically said too bad she's so young she has only two weeks to live I knew he was right but I refused to die so I made a second silent pledge that I will prove dr. Mengele wrong I will survive and be reunited with my twin sister Miriam for the following two weeks I have only one clear memory I remember crawling on the barrack floor because I no longer could walk and I was crawling to reach a faucet with water at the other end of the barrack because this barrack was not even allocated water people were brought there to die and as I was crawling on that filthy barrack floor I kept fading in and out of consciousness and even in a semi-conscious state of mind I kept telling myself I must survive I must survive after two weeks my fever broke and I immediately felt a lot stronger but it took me an other three weeks for a total of five weeks in the hospital then my fever chart showed normal and I was released and reunited with the other twins and my twin sister Miriam the happiness of our reunion was short-lived Miriam looked very sick she looked actually like the Living Dead I left in the barrack and I could not understand what happened to her and I asked her I said me and what happened to you what have they done to you she said I cannot talk about it I will not talk about it and Miriam and I never talked about Auschwitz until 1985 that's a very long time I believe that children who fight for their life whose safety has been violated cannot go back to the experience even as grown-ups until they feel physically safe so in 1985 I asked Miriam I said do you remember when I was taken to the hospital she said yes I said well what happened to you while I was in the hospital she said for the first two weeks I was kept in isolation with Nazi doctor studying me day and night and all I can say that they were waiting for something to happen I did not know what that was because they didn't tell me nor do I know if it happened or it didn't happen I told Miriam it didn't happen I spoiled the experiment I survived when I have died according to the Auschwitz Ms iam Mengele would've killed Miriam with an injection to the heart and the Mengele would have done the comparative autopsies my disease Dorgan and Miriam was a control in Auschwitz according to the Auschwitz Museum Mengele used 100 1,500 sets of twins for a total of thousand individuals the estimated number of surviving Mangala individuals are about two to two hundred the rest probably died into experiment so I asked him what happened to you after the two weeks were up she said she was taken back to the labs injected with many injections that made her feel very sick after the war we went back to Romania after nine months in refugee camps and when we arrived home the house was ransacked neglected and all I found as we were walking through the house was three crumbled pictures on a bedroom floor and that was all that was left of my family we did not know what would happen to us an aunt who knew that we were coming back my father's younger sister took us in and we lived with her in the big city of clues or krauzenberg or college war and communism took over communists had the most wonderful slogans equality Brotherhood and freedom I love those words so I joined the US Communist Party I was 14 years old in 1948 then we had a big May Day Parade and I took I was the leader of certain little pioneers with red neckties then we went for a picnic at the park at noon and then I was told to take my pioneers to a torch parade well I had to study next day and so did the Pioneers and I thought we were parading too much that was more important to study so I sent everybody home next day I was called into headquarters demanding to know where were you with your two so I told him it wasn't more important to study than to go to one more parade began pounding the table what don't you know that mean you are in the communist party you're not supposed to sing you are supposed to follow orders so I said okay if I cannot sing I don't want to be in your party he began laughing you really are a stupid kid aren't you I want you to realize I was a survivor of Auschwitz so what could they do to me I thought so he said we are going to kick you out of school and you cannot attend any school in Romania well at age 14 I saw that I still needed to learn some things so I reluctantly remained in the youth Communist Party but I can tell you one thing for sure I was not a very good communist my aunt said to me Eva if anybody ever gets in trouble it's always you how on earth will always get in trouble so she said we are going to emigrate to Israel and we applied for visa to immigrate where the Romania is very eager to let go fast it took us two years and two years later permitting us only the clothes on our back to take with us so we were wearing three dresses and the winter coat in the middle of the summer we arrived in Israel in 1960 I was 16 year 1950 I was 16 years old we were sent to a youth alia village which is an agricultural school and there were many children from 30 countries saved who survived the war we worked for all the days and we went to school for our the day and then when we turned 80 in 1952 ever drafted into the Israeli army Miriam was sent to medical corps and she studied and became a registered nurse I was sent to engineering core I studied and became a draftsman I liked my job and I was stationed in tel-aviv so I remained in the Israeli army for eight years reaching the rank of sergeant major in 1960 I met a tourist from Terre Haute Indiana who was who survived the Buchenwald concentration camp he was liberated by a lieutenant-colonel from Terre Haute Indiana Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Neff when the war and there my husband said to lieutenant Curran and relief you Americans are very very nice I would like to go to America well you helped me and they did so my husband lived in Terre Haute Indiana and never wanted to live anywhere else I married him in 1960 so I came from Tel Aviv to Terre Haute that's quite a big jump I can tell you Miriam got married in 1958 to an Israeli she expected her first baby in 1960 and she developed severe kidney infections that did not respond to any antibiotic second pregnancy in 1963 the infection got worse and this has been the Israeli doctors had to study her and found out that Miriam's kidneys never grew larger than the size of a ten-year-old child I begged Miriam not to have any more children because every pregnancy seemed to be a life crisis but she did not Center me she had a child eight years later and after the baby was born her kidneys deteriorated and no doctors could help her so in 1987 she had to go on or on dialysis or have a new transplanted kidney where she before she even talked to me she put her name on a transplant list I had a simple solution I had two kidneys and one sister so I donated my left kidney in 1987 and we were a perfect match at that Hospital they have been doing kidney transplants for ten years and all of these people were given anti-rejection medications there were over 2,000 survivors none of them developed cancerous polyps in the bladder except Miriam did a year after the transplant the Israeli doctors kept asking me to try to find our files try to find out what was injected into our bodies I have done everything humanly I could we never found our files nor do we know what was injected into our bodies Miriam's cancer metastasized and she died June 6 1993 I will take you back to the camp because I want to give you a little bit of information how does a ten-year-old child function in a place like oh most of you might have traveled with young children and when you travel with them they might ask you when do we get there not because they want to Ned but children function completely differently than teenagers and grownups it takes a child a lot of mental energy to function in the here-and-now therefore they cannot project forward nor can they project backward so when I was in Auschwitz I sawed that the whole world was one big concentration camp that everybody in the world lived like I lived without any parents or family starving to death surrounded by Nazi guard day and night and that is the way the whole world was until August of 1944 end of August an airplane appeared over the skies of Auschwitz it was flying very low I could see the American flag on one of the wings I know that this public statement about Americans bombing of said that Americans never did ten years ago my husband came back one day said I met a friend at the breakfast club today his name is Bob Sanders he told me that he was a pilot flying over all I said I must meet him right away I met with Bob sander then he told me that was correct he was one of the pilot bombing oh shoot I said could you just sign a document for me he said no we were told that that was top-secret and I could never publicly divulge it well next year I gave Bob Sanders a letter of thanks and I said dear Bob Sanders many many years ago you were a young pilot far away from home flying over our streets in trying to free us I was a little girl below looking up to that airplane you gave me hope to live one more day to survive one more experiment the air raids continued and increased by November it felt like a full pledged battlefield and suddenly our the experiment stopped with the children the slogan someday soon we will be free and whoever go home but we had no idea how freedom would happen the air raids continued until January 27 1945 then one morning we woke up it was quiet eerily quiet we wondered could this be the day we will be free late and afternoon a woman ran into the barrack yelling at the top of her voice we are free we are free I said what does that mean how do I know that she is right I don't see any signs for it so Miriam and I went outside but it was snowing heavily I think we stood there maybe 30 minutes until my eyes got used to the poor visibility at a distance I saw lots of people and they were all wrapped in white camouflage raincoat they were smiling from ear to ear I had no idea who they were but one thing was important for me that they didn't look like the Nazis we ran up to them they gave us chocolate cookies and hugs and this was my first taste of freedom for me to realize that Miriam and I were alive that we have thrived over unbelievable evil that my little promise to myself that first night in the latrine became a reality that was an unbelievable experience I want to thank you all for coming here tonight my this lecture today is lecture number 60 this year last year I gave 203 lectures I am telling you all that so you would realize that I talk a lot now why do I talk so much not because I like to hear the sound of my voice but I want to share with you particularly many young people here what I have learned from my unique life I call them life lessons and I want to share with you three life lessons life lesson number one never ever give up on yourself on your dreams and as I look at your young faces I realize I actually remember growing up is very hard it's very hard even if you live in this beautiful California even if you have a loving parent and wouldn't that be a wonderful idea that every child is a world is born to loving parent and even if your loving parents are very wealthy and they can afford to buy your designer jeans with holes in them I know that's happening I don't understand it even then every single one of you wondered how on earth do I fit into this big big mixed-up world will I be able to accomplish in life but I set out to do I can tell you I want you to remember that there is always hope after despair and there is always a tomorrow after disaster and if we don't give up on ourselves and our dreams we can accomplish anything we put our mind to I had no idea how to survive our fates I tried different sort and I did and Here I am 71 years after liberation very happy and proud to be alive I also want to address sing with young people I know that many of you wondering how you will accomplish what you want to do in your life just remember a few things become the best you that you can become you cannot become the best me or somebody else and if I would like I would like to be five foot seven no matter what I did it will never happen actually I've been shrinking frankly speaking you cannot become anybody else but who you are all you have to study everything you can't study try to improve your surroundings and my executive director care who is here with me even today and I can't bend down anymore I have a grabber then I see a piece of paper on the floor I will pick it up because I want to improve my world a little bit even that little bit improving it and we can all do it or I want to if I have a neighbor who is older than I am I would like to see if they are okay there are a million and one things we can do it doesn't take a lot of money to improve the world I challenge you to be the best you that you can be and when you are the best you that you can be you will be very happy you will like who you are and you are going to be great give great pride to your parents and your community on the other hand like look at the other extreme you can become the worst that you can be you drink too much or drugs you're failing your classes you don't know where you're ending up on the streets are you going to be happy I don't believe so and it all depends on what you put in your mind up for instance if you want to accomplish something put that thought in your mind don't ever say oh that's too difficult I'm not going to be able to do it when you give such an order to your thought you are not going to do anything on the other hand just rank for a little experiment tell yourself I am going to do that and I am going to try everything that I have to do that and see how your mind is following your orders it is amazing and who is in charge of your mind every single one of you are in charge of your own mind life lesson number two I want it now that meant I would survived Auschwitz I was 11 years old I desperately needed parent and I desperately needed hugs and kisses from my parents but I got none so when you see your parents with Mother's Day just coming up around the corner I want you to do me a favor please give your mom's to your mother's an extra hug and the Nestor kiss for all of us children who survived the camps who never again had any mothers to hug and kiss life lesson number three I forgave the Nazis I forgave everybody who has ever hurt me and it didn't happen to help the Nazis nor did I planned that I just stumbled on it after Miriam died I came home on a Sunday afternoon from an open house there was a message on my answering machine from my brother-in-law telling me I am sorry to inform you but your sister died I was not quite prepared to live in a world without my sister I immediately called Israel and I told my brother Luna said I have never buried any member of my family such a simple human gesture and I wanted to go to Israel I actually wanted to touch my sister say goodbye to her and even say goodbye to my kidney she was taking with her but my brother-in-law said to me we can't wait for you the funeral is in 10 hours Israeli 7 hours ahead and the flight from Newark New Jersey as I took it this January direct flight from Newark to Tel Aviv is 10 hours I kept pleading with him but he said they cannot wait for me so I was left with a lot of pain I would wake up many nights suffocating I could feel exactly the way Miriam died and her lungs were filled with cancer then I couldn't go back to sleep so I thought I will do something in her memory that is my way of coping with pain always 2 years later I opened candles Holocaust Museum and Education Center and my nightmare stopped about a month after Miriam's death unrelated to Miriam's death I received a telephone call from a professor at Boston College during me hard cheek who asked me to come and speak at a conference or Nazi medicine and then he said to me when you talk when you come it would be nice that you could bring with you a Nazi doctor stunned at such a request I was not left silent I immediately blurted out and where exactly do you think I could find one of those guys since last time I looked they weren't advertising in the yellow pages so he said to me Eva think about it maybe you come up with some ID and I did I remember next day that the last project that Miriam and I worked was a documentary done by a German television and there was a Nazi doctor from Auschwitz we finish the documentary in 1992 this was just a year later and I there was a Nazi doctor from Auschwitz Hans Muench and I thought he might be still alive I we got his telephone number we invited him to come to Boston he said he was not going to Boston but amazingly he was willing to meet with me at his house in Germany so August of 1993 I am heading to Germany to meet an art adapter I was so scared I didn't realize that I would be that scared then the closer it gods or worse is God but I was curious number one maybe he knew something about our experiment and curious why was he willing to meet with me we arrived at his house he treated me with the utmost respect kindness and consideration unfortunately he knew nothing about our experiment because Mangala always said that the twins experiments were top secret he gave me a good interview for my Boston conference and then out of the blue I asked him simply you were an outfit did you ever walk by the gas chamber did you ever go inside the gas chamber do you know anything about the gas chamber and he immediately said this is my problem this is my nightmare that I live with every single day of my life and even are describing the operation of the gas chamber Zyklon B and you can google it looks like pellets of white gravel the gas did not come from the showerhead as I complete respect in canisters opened outside the roof and drop through vent like holes it fell to the floor and it operated like dry ice so the gas was rising from the floor and as people where it was hitting their nostril they started suffocating and they were trying to get away from the rising gas climbing on top of each other forming a little bit of a mountain of intermingled bodies doctor mooch was stationed outside looking through a peephole when the people on the pile stopped moving he knew that everybody was dead and he would sign one death certificate no names just a number of people that were cured I immediately told him that this was very important information and I wanted him to go with me to Auschwitz and sign a document at the ruins of the gas chamber in the company of witnesses and he immediately told me he would love to do it I got back to Terre Haute Indiana very excited that I will have this original document documenting the gas chambers I wanted to thank him I don't know why and I'm still surprised at that but I didn't want to tell anybody because I was sure that my friends and family would try to stop me because it sounded crazy when I was going to go ahead with it I did not know how to thank him and for the next 10 months I brainstormed every time I thought of something I was driving doing the laundry cleaning the house cooking I brain stoned and after 10 months a simple idea popped into my head back again to the idea of how our minds work it's an amazing organ the human mind how about a letter of forgiveness from me to dr. munch I immediately knew that this was a meaningful gift for him but what I discovered for myself was life-changing I discovered that I had the power to forgive no one could give me that power and no one could take it away it was all mine to use it in any way I wished and I would like to remind every single one of you here that you do have the power to forgive no one can give it to you and no one can take it away from you so use it in any way you wish after four months I liked what I wrote but then I was concerned about my spelling so I called my former English professor to correct my spelling and we met about three times the third time she told Nina Eva that's very nice that you forgive dr. munch but your problem is with dr. mengele I tried to rebate that she said okay I'd be meeting with you correcting your spelling I want to ask you for a favor today when you go home pretend that you're talking to Mangala and telling him that you forgive him because I wanted to find out how might you feel if you could do that sounded like an interesting idea I went home that evening close the bedroom door picked up a dictionary made a list of nasty words and then I read them clear and loud and at the end when I finished I said in spite of all that I forgive you and I had a tremendously feeling that I even had the power over Josef Mengele the last relationship between me and Joseph Mengele was my forgiveness and there was nothing that he could do to change it it made me feel very good now if I forgave Mengele I wasn't hurting anybody and might as well forgive everybody who has ever hurt me so that is the way we arrived in Auschwitz dr. munch came with his son his daughter and granddaughter I took my son and my daughter dr. munch signed his document I read and signed mine and I immediately felt that all the pain was lifted from my shoulder I was no longer a victim of Auschwitz nor was I a prisoner of my tragic past I was free of Auschwitz and I was free of Mengele if you want to find our website all you have to do is Google Eva Kor go to Education Center and you will find these two documents and you can download them I also want you to know that I am a big Twitter I tweet a lot and I began tweeting basically if I come up with an idea about forgiveness or trying to help refugees in Syria or like today I put seven today 72 years since we were taken to Auschwitz so I put in something about the Holocaust and here are some ideas about forgiveness forgiveness is the best revenge the perpetrator caused the perpetrator no longer had any power of influence over the victim forgiveness create a feeling of wholeness insult spirit and action going in the same direction creating a force for good it's free I like that idea everybody can afford it it works it has no side effects and if you don't like the way you feel as a free person you can go and take your pain back no one will stop you as I've been dealing with the issue the forecast I also observed that Hitler himself was a very angry man and I see many angry men who want to create war therefore I call anger a seed for war people who forgive like I have forgiveness forgiving or at peace with themselves and the world therefore I call forgiveness a seed for peace if any of you in the audience today has any problems and you want to try my free recipe for healing take a piece of paper and a pen and write a letter to the person or the people who have hurt you please do not mail it to them at the bottom of the letter you must write I forgive you and you must mean that word and if you succeed in your forgiveness you are going to feel a sense of liberation that you have never felt before I often describe the feeling like Maria in the sound of music being on the top of the hill and feeling the fresh air flowing through her hair and body and if you succeed in doing that pass it on to other people because I need all of you to help me sow those seeds for peace throughout the world congratulations you survived my lecture come up to the microphone may the memory of your parents and your brothers and your sisters be a blessing it may be may their souls be comfort in heaven would you speak please about what forgiveness is and how you yeah what it is and how you experience it well I will what I will do because it's the simple thing I have a little statement here that I have put together so I usually don't use it for lectures but you are asking me to describe a lot of detail I saw that I did in my own statement and I hope I find that piece of paper I might not maybe if not I will just go back it has nothing to do with the perpetrator it has nothing to do with an artist forgiveness is an act of self healing and to discover that ie it took that I have that power is very very important because most victims who are victimized feel in the memory of my parent I mean that has nothing to do forgiveness is not in the memory it is my power and my ideas that I in spite of the fact that I survived Auschwitz and I lost my whole family continuing to suffer how does that honor my parents or family instead of that I want to honor them with my decision to live free and to be happy and I would say if I live my life to the best of my ability and I am the happiest person I feel that this is the best revenge against the Nazis being miserable home on earth does it help I don't think it my parent would be proud or happy to see me miserable or my sister then I know actually today there was no martial observant so in Israel they had a radio program where they interviewed me and another Mengele twin who was who said her life she believed that she has to be miserable for the rest of her life and they unfortunately the interview was done in Hebrew so I am not sure how good I was at it because my ebook it's pretty good but not as good as English I found it said that she believes that she survives to be as miserable as she could be how honest does it help the memory of her parent I do not understand that I I feel I mean I don't exactly know how what you wanted me to tell you but forgiveness it's not condoning how can anybody condone what happened I have never said I'll condone it but to realize that I and every one of you here has power over their daily life we do not have to be the past the tragic past that we were at times experiencing we don't have to be the past we can be the future and the future is up to us to decide how we are going to feel and how we are going to behave I'm very confused and perplexed and I'm hoping that you'll help me okay understand something okay we've all heard about the Holocaust but genocide is still going on and why is it still tolerated it's gotten Rwanda it's going on for right why is it tolerated why is it accepted well I am not accepting it I feel a little bit guilty sitting right here with you because I have a place called home and I have a roof over my head and I bet I can climb in and every single one of you probably do and I feel safe I do not understand why it's going on but I will ask you for another favor I cannot change what's going on in there for and actually about a month or so ago I was asked by a former representative of United Nations and he asked me the people of Darfur are asking for your advice I said wow I didn't even know they knew I existed I said tell them not to be such willing victims they were stunned what does it mean I said they have accepted their destiny in ten years the world tried to help help al Bashir was condemned to jail but nobody can find al Bashir China escaped selling armaments to al Bashir if there are seven million people in Darfur right now who all of them live in dying conditions or are some who are free let's say that those who can tweet email just said that tweet through the system several million let's say 1 million tweet telling the story of their pool and pointing the finger at the guilty people my dad make it different I don't have all the answers but I am I am only one mind all of you spend one hour a month in thinking how you could come up with an idea to help the people of their poor it's not only my responsibility is every single one of our disability I agree thank you before we thank IVA let me remind you that as soon as we're finished she will be seated at the table and if you come around to the staircase it's on your right she will sign your books and you probably you really want to have this book in your library I think so from all of us we thank you very very much for sharing this and really I think giving us new ways to experience freedom ourselves thank you very much you
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Channel: University of California Television (UCTV)
Views: 25,809
Rating: 4.6973996 out of 5
Keywords: Holocaust, Mengele, nazis, Eva Kor
Id: bCVZPSzTqZU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 58min 26sec (3506 seconds)
Published: Mon Jun 06 2016
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