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Eva & Mickey Kor

Eva Mozes Kor

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Eva Mozes Kor was a survivor of the Holocaust, a forgiveness advocate, and a revered public speaker. With the driving message of "never give up" in mind, Eva emerged through a life filled with trauma as a brilliant example of the power of the human spirit to overcome adversity. She was a community leader, a champion of human rights, and tireless educator of young people. Eva travelled around the world to share her message, in addition to leading hundreds of people on a journey to Auschwitz each year. Eva was one of the few surviving Mengele Twins to share her personal account of the medical experiments supervised by Nazi doctor Josef Mengele at Auschwitz.

In 1995, Eva opened CANDLES Holocaust Museum and Education Center in Terre Haute, IN, with a mission to illuminate the world with hope, healing, respect, and responsibility through education about the Holocaust. As the only Holocaust museum in Indiana, CANDLES is also the only organization in the world dedicated to the memory of the twin victims and survivors of medical experimentation at Auschwitz. Eva’s preserved account of her survival of the Holocaust offers many relevant lessons on the dangers of hate speech and prejudice, and the importance of being an informed citizen. Eva’s message of healing reaches around the globe and across social, economic, and cultural boundaries. 

In addition to the importance of her account of the Holocaust from a historical perspective, Eva’s life lessons and message of survival and forgiveness touched the lives of countless people. In 1995, Eva chose to forgive the Nazis. She decided that they would no longer have power over her life. She describes forgiving the Nazis as an act of self-healing, self-liberation, and self-empowerment; forgiveness is not about the perpetrator, nor about forgetting. It is one step toward repairing the world by helping victims free themselves from perpetrators and remove anger and hatred. 

Her story is documented in the award-winning film Forgiving Dr. Mengele and the popular young adult book Surviving the Angel of Death: The True Story of a Mengele Twin in Auschwitz. Eva’s story is also the subject of a feature-length documentary, Eva A-7063, which premiered in April 2018. Eva’s life is an introduction to the possibility of healing that opens minds and demonstrates that important first step toward self-release from victimhood.

Rachmiel (Mickey) Kor 

Michael “Mickey” Kor was a Holocaust survivor, Purdue University’s greatest fan, and husband to Eva Mozes Kor, founder of CANDLES Holocaust Museum and Education Center. Miickey was born in Riga, Latvia to Scholom and Mirka Kor on October 24,1925, and was the youngest of four boys. Because his father was a shoemaker, Mickey’s family did not have the resources to escape when the Nazis invaded, and they were forced into the Riga ghetto. His father was murdered by a guard on the same day that the family was forced into the ghetto leaving his mother to move them in alone. During the liquidation of the ghetto, Mickey’s mother saved his life by pushing him into the group of older boys that would be selected for slave labor. This was the last time he ever saw her. Mirka and the rest of the ghetto inhabitants who were not selected for forced labor were murdered in a mass shooting.

After surviving four years of forced labor in four different camps during the Holocaust, Mickey was liberated in 1945 by United States soldiers from the 250th Engineer Combat Army Battalion. Along with granting Mickey freedom, one of the first gifts that these soldiers gave to him was his first bottle of Coca-Cola. Ever since that moment, Mickey has associated the bubbly drink with his "first taste of freedom." Mickey was able to speak several languages because he was transferred through so many different camps. He was able to serve as the battalion’s translator through which he became close friends with Lieutenant Colonel Nehf. After the war, Mickey petitioned to move to Indiana and Lieutenant Colonel Nehf found a sponsor for Mickey to move to Nehf’s hometown of Terre Haute, Indiana. Mickey became an American citizen and a frequent visitor of the Nehf home where he taught himself to play the piano.

Mickey was visiting family in Israel in 1960 when he met Eva Mozes and within weeks the two were engaged. After they were married, they moved to Terre Haute where they raised two children. Mickey attended Purdue University and became a licensed pharmacist as well as a lifelong fan of the university’s sporting teams. When Eva opened CANDLES Holocaust Museum and Education Center in 1995, he stood by her side. And he remained by her side when they had to rebuild the museum after the arson attack in 2003. Mickey volunteered at CANDLES as a docent, always greeting any guests with the utmost politeness, and he could often be found in the back of the museum happily playing the piano for anyone who would listen. Mickey utilized his passion for sports when sharing his story with visitors. When parts of his story became too hard to tell he would use sports analogies to explain. 

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