Imagen del autor

Edith Eva Eger

Autor de The Choice

11 Obras 1,240 Miembros 40 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Dr. Edith Eva Eger maintains a busy clinical practice in La Jolla, California, and holds a faculty appointment at the University of California, San Diego. She also serves as a consultant for the U.S. Army and Navy in resiliency training and the treatment of PTSD. Edie is still dancing-and ends her mostrar más talks with a ballet high kick. mostrar menos

Obras de Edith Eva Eger

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Eger, Edith Eva
Fecha de nacimiento
1927-09-29
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Czechoslovakia (birth)
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Czechoslovakia
Košice, Slovakia
Lugares de residencia
Hungary
Czechoslovakia
Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp
La Jolla, California, USA
Educación
University of Texas, El Paso
Ocupaciones
therapist
author
public speaker
Holocaust survivor
memoirist
clinical psychologist
Agente
Doug Abrams
Biografía breve
Edith Eva Eger was born to a family of Hungarian Jews living in Košice, Czechoslovakia (present-day Slovakia). Her parents were Lajos and Ilona Elefánt; her father was a tailor and her mother a civil servant. Her two older sisters, Clara and Magda, were talented musicians. Edith attended gymnasium (high school) and took ballet lessons. In 1942, Hungary, which had annexed the region, enacted anti-Jewish laws, and their whole world changed. In March 1944, when Edith was 17, the family was forced with other Jews into the Košice ghetto; Clara was hidden by her music teacher. In May of that year, they were deported to the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. Her parents were sent to the gas chambers immediately, but Edith and Magda were selected to work.
Later, the girls were sent to other camps, including Mauthausen in Austria. In 1945, as the Red Army approached, the sisters were sent on a death march to the Gunskirchen subcamp. Edith nearly collapsed from disease and starvation along the way but other girls helped to carry her. When the U.S. military liberated the camp in May 1945, according to Edith, she was left for dead among a number of bodies. A soldier is said to have rescued her after seeing her hand move.

After World War II ended, Edith recovered in her native city; there she met and married Béla (Albert) Éger, a fellow survivor, with whom she would have three children. In 1949, they emigrated to the USA. She received her PhD degree in clinical psychology from the University of Texas, El Paso

in 1978 and opened a practice in La Jolla, California. She holds a faculty appointment at the University of California, San Diego. She is a frequently-invited speaker throughout the USA and abroad, and has appeared on many television programs. The documentary film I Danced for the Angel of Death: The Dr. Edith Eva Eger Story aired on public television in 2015. Her memoir The Choice: Embrace the Possible was published in 2017. Her second book The Gift: 12 Lessons to Save Your Life appeared in 2020.

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
gutierrezmonge | 31 reseñas más. | Mar 23, 2023 |
Libro excepcional. Edith Eger, superviviente con mayúsculas nos enseña cómo afrontar la vida a través de su terrible experiencia. Muy bueno.
½
 
Denunciada
javierren | 31 reseñas más. | May 20, 2020 |

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Obras
11
Miembros
1,240
Popularidad
#20,704
Valoración
½ 4.4
Reseñas
40
ISBNs
70
Idiomas
12

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