burning-candles

Auschwitz memories: A child survivor lives to tell

Tenafly, NJ

By IAC New jersey
event ticket
Event
presentation
Face 2 Face
translation
English
Monday April 21, 2025 8:00 pm
Monday April 21, 2025 9:30 pm
(Eastern Time)
stopwatch
Duration: 2 hours

Tova Friedman is one of the youngest Holocaust survivors, a title she carries with both honor and sorrow.
Born in Tomaszow Mazowiecki, Poland, Tova was one of only five children from her hometown to survive the atrocities
of the Nazi regime, during which more than 1.5 million Jewish children were murdered. Throughout her harrowing journey,
she witnessed unimaginable horrors and narrowly escaped death on numerous occasions.
She is among a select few who survived the gas chambers and lived to share her story.

At 83, Tova wrote her memoir, The Daughter of Auschwitz, which became a New York Times Best Seller and has been translated
into more than 15 languages. This summer, Tova will release a new book, The Girl Who Lived to Tell Her Story, targeted at young adults.

Tova is dedicated to educating younger generations about the Holocaust, and alongside her grandson Aron Goodman, she co-founded TovaTok, a social media platform aimed at sharing Holocaust education and spreading her story to a global audience.
With over half a million followers and more than 100 million views, TovaTok has become a vital resource for raising awareness
of the Holocaust’s horrors and its lasting impact.

Tova emigrated to the United States with her parents when she was 11 years old, settling in Brooklyn, where she later met and married Maier Friedman, with whom she shared a 60-year marriage. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Brooklyn College and a Master of Arts in Black Literature from City College of New York. After living in Israel for more than a decade, where she taught at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Tova returned to the U.S., earned a Master of Arts in Social Work from Rutgers University, and became
the director of Jewish Family Service of Somerset and Warren Counties for over 20 years. She continues to work as a therapist,
serving her community with compassion and dedication.

IAC is a nonprofit organization dedicated to combating antisemitism. We work in K-12 schools to promote education about antisemitism and ensure the memory
of the Holocaust is preserved. Support our initiatives by making a donation — every contribution makes a difference

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