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Lily's Promise
Lily's Promise: How I Survived Auschwitz and Found the Strength to Live | Lily Ebert
4 posts | 3 read | 8 to read
With a foreword by HRH The Prince of Wales 'A stunningly moving book about the power of hope and love to overcome the very worst of mankind' Piers Morgan When Holocaust survivor Lily Ebert was liberated in 1945, a Jewish-American soldier gave her a banknote on which he’d written ‘Good luck and happiness’. And when her great-grandson, Dov, decided to use social media to track down the family of the GI, 96-year-old Lily found herself making headlines round the world. Lily had promised herself that if she survived Auschwitz she would tell everyone the truth about the camp. Now was her chance. In Lily’s Promise she writes movingly about her happy childhood in Hungary, the death of her mother and two youngest siblings on their arrival at Auschwitz in 1944 and her determination to keep her two other sisters safe. She describes the inhumanity of the camp and the small acts of defiance that gave her strength. From there she and her sisters became slave labour in a munitions factory, and then faced a death march that they barely survived. Lily lost so much, but she built a new life for herself and her family, first in Israel and then in London. It wasn’t easy; the pain of her past was always with her, but this extraordinary woman found the strength to speak out in the hope that such evil would never happen again. 'Utterly compelling, heartbreaking, truthful and yet redemptive, a memoir of the Holocaust, a testimony of irrepressible spirit and an unforgettable family chronicle, written in lucid prose by a truly remarkable woman about her life from Hungary to Auschwitz, Israel to London. I couldn't stop reading it.' Simon Sebag Montefiore
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This is a memoir written by 97 year old Lily Ebert. At the tender age of 16, she and her family were sent to Aushwitz. 6 family members were sent there and only 3 survived. This is the story of the survival of Lily and her sisters and how she built a life in spite of being left destitute and near death in the spring of 1945. A story of a woman who reinvented reself time and time again. She fulfills her promise to make the world remember the horror

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1. An arc of Lily‘s Promise by Lily Elbert. This amazing 98 year old and her accounting of life through the Holocaust.

Maniac: The Bath School Disaster. 38 children and six adults killed in 1927.

Just Like Mother by Anne Heltzel. Comes out in May.

2. Podcasts. I just listened to the whole season of The Thing About Pam.

3. I think I‘ve only listened to one audio book! I‘m a Stranger Here Myself by Bill Bryson.

#weekendreads