In 1949, Eger moved to the US with her late husband, Béla Eger, and earned a psychology degree in 1969.
She went on to become a best-selling author, a psychologist who specializes in healing trauma, and a great-grandmother to seven.
AdvertisementAlmost 40 years after the Holocaust, Eger returned to Auschwitz to release her grief and survivor's guilt, she wrote in her memoir "The Choice."
But we can choose how we live now," Eger, 97, writes in her new book "The Ballerina of Auschwitz."
In Japan's Blue Zone Okinawa, a region where people live around a decade longer than the country's average, older residents remind themselves of their "ikigai," or life purpose, every morning.
Persons:
Edith Eger, Eger, —, Magda, Béla, Edie, Jordan Engle, I'd, Engle, Marianne, centenarians, Klara, She's, it's
Organizations:
Service, Slovakian, Nazi, Complutense University of Madrid
Locations:
Auschwitz, Mauthausen, Austrian, Košice, Hungary, Béla Eger, Eger, San Diego