Dr eva olsson biography of michael
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'Remember this every day for me': Anne Frank exhibit opens in Edmonton Public Schools archives
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When Dr. Eva Olsson was a young woman, the choice to let go of her young niece’s hand at a Nazi work camp would end up saving her life.
Mothers with children were killed while single women were spared for slave labour during the Holocaust, she told students from W.P. Wagner High School at the Edmonton Public Schools Archives and Museum on Tuesday.
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“Don’t take this gift for granted,” said Olsson, a Holocaust survivor born in Hungary.
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Holocaust survivor teaches kids the consequences of being a bullying bystander
Lessons learned from one of the world’s worst atrocities can be relevant to today’s teenagers.
Dr. Eva Olsson spoke today to packed gymnasium at Barrie North Collegiate.
The 93-year-old Holocaust survivor was there to speak to the students and staff about her experiences in Nazi-occupied Europe. Though still images played out on a screen, a room full of people hung on to every word Olsson had to say. Olsson wasn’t shy in telling the room how bad it was and that it should never be taken lightly.
“This was no video game or movie,” said Olsson. “It was real life and real death. And for many there was no hero to save the day; millions died without a grave. It is the saddest story you can hear.”
Olsson recounted her time in Auschwitz and the genocide she saw first-hand that took place from 1941 to 1945 and saw the killing of what is estimated at 11 million people, six million of which were Jewish. At the age of twenty, Olsson and her family rode on the four day train ride of Hell to the concentration camp that would be the last place she would see many of the people she knew and loved. Told they were going to work in a brick factory, it became clear when the