Edith Eger

Edith Eger
Native name
Edith Éger
BornEdith Eva Elefánt
(1927-09-29) September 29, 1927 (age 96)
Košice, Czechoslovakia
OccupationClinical psychologist
NationalityHungarian Jewish
EducationPhD in Clinical psychology (1978)
Alma materUniversity of Texas at El Paso
GenresMemoir, self-help
SubjectsHolocaust survivor experiences, recovery from trauma
Notable works
  • The Choice: Embrace the Possible (2017)
  • The Gift: 12 Lessons to Save Your Life (2020)
Notable awardsThe Choice became a New York Times and Sunday Times bestseller.
RelativesRobert F. Engle (son-in-law)

Edith Eva Eger (born September 29, 1927) is a Hungarian-born American psychologist, a Holocaust survivor and a specialist in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder.[1] Her memoir entitled The Choice: Embrace the Possible, published in 2017, became an international bestseller.[2] Her second book, titled The Gift: 12 Lessons to Save Your Life was published in September 2020.

Biography

Edith Eger is the youngest daughter of Lajos (a tailor) and Ilona Elefánt born in Košice, Czechoslovakia.[3][1]

Eger attended gymnasium and took ballet lessons. She was a member of the Hungarian Olympic gymnastics team.[4][5] In 1942 the Hungarian government enacted new anti-Jewish laws and she was removed from the gymnastics team. Her elder sister Klara was a violin player and was admitted to the Conservatory of Budapest. During the war Klara was hidden by her music teacher.[6] Her sister Magda was a pianist.

In March 1944, after the German occupation of Hungary, Eger was forced to live in the Kassa ghetto with her parents and Magda. In April they were forced to stay in a brick factory with 12,000 other Jews for a month.[1] In May of that year they were deported to Auschwitz. She was separated from her mother by Josef Mengele; her mother was murdered in the gas chamber. In her memoirs, Eger relates that the same evening Mengele made her dance for him in her barracks.[5] As a "thank you", she received a loaf of bread that she shared with other girls.[7]

According to her memoirs, Eger stayed in various camps, including Mauthausen.[6] The Nazis evacuated Mauthausen and other concentration camps as the Americans and the Red Army approached.[1] Eger was sent on a death march with her sister Magda to the Gunskirchen concentration camp,[8] a distance of about 55 kilometers. When she couldn't walk further due to exhaustion, one of the girls with whom she had shared Mengele's bread recognized her and carried her onward together with Magda.[7] Conditions in Gunskirchen were so bad that Eger had to eat grass to survive, while other prisoners turned to cannibalism.[9] When the U.S. military liberated the camp in May 1945, according to Eger, she was left for dead among a number of dead bodies. A soldier is said to have rescued her after seeing her hand move. The soldier quickly sought medical attention and saved her life. She weighed 32 kilograms (5 stone / 70 pounds) at the time, and had a broken back, typhoid fever, pneumonia, and pleurisy.[10][1]

While in the camps Eger guided those close to her to look at life from the inside out, as in to be reflective of their inner world. Her belief is to never wait for someone to make you happy, but to go within and seek happiness within oneself, as this will then alter the way the world around you is perceived.[11] To be realistic and not idealistic, is also one of Eger's practices. Her deep faith in the camps encouraged her to pray for the guards that kept her in the camps, understanding that they were brainwashed. In her words: "People said where was God but I always say that God was with me," she says. "The Nazi guards were prisoners too. I prayed for them. I turned hatred into pity. I never told anyone that they were spending their days murdering people. What kind of life was that for them? They had been brainwashed. Their own youth had been taken away from them."[12]

After the war

Edith and Magda recovered in American field hospitals and returned to Kassa where they found their sister Klara. Their parents and Edith's fiancé Eric did not survive Auschwitz. She married Béla (Albert) Éger, whom she met in the hospital.[1] He was also a Jewish survivor who had joined the partisans during the war. In 1949, after threats from the communists, they fled together with their daughter Marianne to Texas, United States. There she suffered from her war trauma and survivor guilt, and did not want to talk about the war with her three children.[1]

Eger befriended Viktor Frankl, went into therapy, and received her PhD in Clinical Psychology from the University of Texas at El Paso in 1978. She also received her license to practise as a psychologist.[4] She opened a therapy clinic in La Jolla, California and was appointed to the faculty at the University of California, San Diego.

In 1990, Eger returned to Auschwitz to face her repressed emotions. At the urging of Philip Zimbardo, she published her experiences in her first book The Choice in 2017.[10]

In her work as a psychologist, Eger helps her clients to free themselves from their own thoughts, and helps them to ultimately choose freedom. The Choice became a New York Times and Sunday Times bestseller.[13][14] In her second book The Gift (2020) she encourages the reader to change the thoughts that, according to Eger, imprison us and the destructive behaviors that would hinder us. What happens to us in life is not the most important thing in the end, she says. Rather, the most important thing is what we do with our lives.

Eger has appeared on CNN and the Oprah Winfrey Show.[7]

Family

The Eger family had two more children after moving to the United States. Their daughter Marianne is married to Robert Engle, Nobel laureate in economics.[8] Béla Eger died in 1993.[15]

Publications

  • The Choice – Embrace the Possible. Scribner, 2017, ISBN 9781501130786
  • The Gift – 12 Lessons to Save Your Life. Ebury Publishing, 2020, ISBN 9781846046278

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Mind power in Auschwitz – and healing decades later". The Guardian. 2018-09-02. Retrieved 2020-11-08.
  2. ^ "How to Break Free From Your Mental Prisons, With Psychologist Dr. Edith Eger". Lifehacker Australia. 2020-10-05. Retrieved 2020-11-07.
  3. ^ Marci Jenkins (14 August 1992). "Oral history interview with Edith Eva Eger". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Holocaust-overlevende Edith Eger vertelt over donkere tijd". KRO-NCRV (in Dutch). Retrieved 2020-11-07.
  5. ^ a b Lori Gottlieb (6 October 2017). "What a Survivor of Auschwitz Learned From the Trauma of Others". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  6. ^ a b "Eger, Dr. Edith". El Paso Holocaust Museum. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  7. ^ a b c "Oprah's SuperSoul conversations: Dr. Eith Eva Eger – The Choice". YouTube. 30 August 2020. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  8. ^ a b Antoinette Scheulderman (2017). "De ballerina van Auschwitz". de Volkskrant Kijk Verder (in Dutch). Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  9. ^ "Dr. Edith Eger: 'A dialogue with Edie'". De School voor Transitie. May 2019. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  10. ^ a b Ykje Vriesinga (9 October 2020). "Auschwitz-overlevende Edith Eger: 'Mijn wens is gelukkig te sterven'". NRC Handelsblad (in Dutch). Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  11. ^ Moore, Anna (2018-09-02). "Mind power in Auschwitz – and healing decades later". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-11-10.
  12. ^ "'They sent my mother to the gas chamber and I blamed myself': How Auschwitz survivor Edith Eger rebuilt her life". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. 2020-09-05. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 2023-11-10.
  13. ^ Melissa Simon (1 September 2020). "NYT Bestselling Author and Holocaust Survivor Edith Eger on Her Self-Help Book 'The Gift'". Jewish Journal. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  14. ^ "The Sunday Times Bestsellers, February 17". The Sunday Times. 17 February 2019. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  15. ^ "Eger, Albert". El Paso Holocaust Museum. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
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