Asked what her message was to the Israeli people at this traumatic time, a year after October 7, Dr. Edith Eva Eger said: “In Auschwitz, I never gave up hope. It’s temporary, and you take one day at a time. Every moment is an opportunity for an opportunity. You change your mind, you change your life. Don’t give up hope.”

Dr. Edie, as she is popularly known, is an award-winning American writer, Holocaust survivor, and clinical psychologist who specializes in the treatment of PTSD. My sister, Debbie Sandler, and I interviewed her and her grandson Jordan Engle on Zoom from their home in La Jolla, California, ahead of her 97th birthday on September 29 and the October 1 launch of her third book, The Ballerina of Auschwitz.

 “The book of hope,” as she calls it, is a young adult version of her bestselling 2017 memoir, The Choice, which she published at the age of 90, followed by The Gift (2020). What motivated her to write a book for younger readers? “Because they are the ambassadors for peace and goodwill,” Eger said. “I think they are the future. I think it’s very important for us to let them know what they can be – survivors and not victims of anything or anyone at any time.” 

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