



I Will Protect You
A True Story of Twins Who Survived Auschwitz
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4.7 • 3 Ratings
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
The illuminating and deeply moving true story of twin sisters who survived Nazi experimentation, against all odds, during the Holocaust.
Eva and her identical twin sister, Miriam, had a mostly happy childhood. Theirs was the only Jewish family in their small village in the Transylvanian mountains, but they didn't think much of it until anti-Semitism reared its ugly head in their school. Then, in 1944, ten-year-old Eva and her family were deported to Auschwitz. At its gates, Eva and Miriam were separated from their parents and other siblings, selected as subjects for Dr. Mengele's infamous medical experiments.
During the course of the war, Mengele would experiment on 3,000 twins. Only 160 would survive--including Eva and Miriam.
Writing with her friend Danica Davidson, Eva reveals how two young girls were able to survive the unimaginable cruelty of the Nazi regime, while also eventually finding healing and the capacity to forgive. Spare and poignant, I Will Protect You is a vital memoir of survival, loss, and forgiveness.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In a powerful telling, the late Eva Mozes Kor (1934–2019) and Davidson provide as much history lesson as personal recollection and call for human rights. The book opens in 1941, as seven-year-old Eva and her identical twin Miriam (d. 1993), members of the only Jewish family in a Romanian village, encounter anti-Jewish ideas in media as well as experience cruelty from previously friendly classmates. Eva's nature as a leader willing to speak her mind is quickly established as she presses her resigned parents: "It's not safe to stay here." Following the family's deportation to Auschwitz, where she and Miriam become part of Josef Mengele's experimentations on identical twins, the girls' horrific experiences—intense reading for the target audience—are interspersed with contextualizing background on topics such as anti-Semitism, conspiracy theories and propaganda, genocide, and WWII. Eva's "unending desire for survival," her vow to protect Miriam, and "luck" bring the sisters through the war and to Israel in 1950; final chapters trace Eva's subsequent years as a human rights activist and Holocaust educator in Indiana. Unflinching in its first-person telling, the narrative is carried by its narrator's passionate conviction, per an afterword, that "memories will provide the necessary fuel to light the way to hope." Back matter includes a timeline and glossary. Ages 8–12. ■