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In 1995, Holocaust survivor Eva Kor opened the CANDLES Museum in Terre Haute, Indiana—the only Holocaust museum in the state. Eva and her twin sister Miriam survived Josef Mengele's horrific medical experiments at Auschwitz, enduring procedures that killed most of the children in the notorious "twins' barracks." Fifty years later, Eva transformed her small-town home into a center for Holocaust education and remembrance.
Just eight months after opening, on November 16, 1995, the museum was destroyed by arson. Firefighters arriving at 224 South 7th Street found the building engulfed in flames, the carefully curated collection of artifacts and survivor testimonies reduced to ashes. The attack devastated Terre Haute's small Jewish community and shocked the nation. But the fire that consumed Eva's museum could not destroy her mission or her remarkable story of survival.
This is Part 1 of Eva Kor's story: from the cattle cars of 1944 to the founding of CANDLES, exploring how one woman's refusal to let history be forgotten made her a target. Discover the hidden history of Indiana's Holocaust Museum—and the woman who survived the unimaginable twice.
Episode SummaryMost people don't know that Indiana had a Holocaust museum—or that it was destroyed by arson just months after opening. In 1995, Eva Kor, a survivor of Josef Mengele's twin experiments at Auschwitz, opened the CANDLES Holocaust Museum in her adopted hometown of Terre Haute, Indiana. On November 16, 1995, an arsonist set fire to the building, destroying decades of carefully preserved history and survivor testimonies.
This two-part series tells Eva Kor's extraordinary story: Part 1 covers her childhood in Romania, her deportation to Auschwitz at age 10, her survival of Mengele's medical experiments, her post-war life, and her decision to create Indiana's only Holocaust museum. Part 2 (next episode) will cover the arson attack, the investigation, and Eva's response to having her life's work destroyed.
Key LocationsPrimary:
Secondary:
Eva Kor's Early Life:
Post-War & Immigration:
CANDLES Museum:
Eva Mozes Kor (1934-2019)
Miriam Mozes Zeiger (1934-1993)
Dr. Josef Mengele (1911-1979)
The Mozes Family
By Shane Waters4.5
138138 ratings
In 1995, Holocaust survivor Eva Kor opened the CANDLES Museum in Terre Haute, Indiana—the only Holocaust museum in the state. Eva and her twin sister Miriam survived Josef Mengele's horrific medical experiments at Auschwitz, enduring procedures that killed most of the children in the notorious "twins' barracks." Fifty years later, Eva transformed her small-town home into a center for Holocaust education and remembrance.
Just eight months after opening, on November 16, 1995, the museum was destroyed by arson. Firefighters arriving at 224 South 7th Street found the building engulfed in flames, the carefully curated collection of artifacts and survivor testimonies reduced to ashes. The attack devastated Terre Haute's small Jewish community and shocked the nation. But the fire that consumed Eva's museum could not destroy her mission or her remarkable story of survival.
This is Part 1 of Eva Kor's story: from the cattle cars of 1944 to the founding of CANDLES, exploring how one woman's refusal to let history be forgotten made her a target. Discover the hidden history of Indiana's Holocaust Museum—and the woman who survived the unimaginable twice.
Episode SummaryMost people don't know that Indiana had a Holocaust museum—or that it was destroyed by arson just months after opening. In 1995, Eva Kor, a survivor of Josef Mengele's twin experiments at Auschwitz, opened the CANDLES Holocaust Museum in her adopted hometown of Terre Haute, Indiana. On November 16, 1995, an arsonist set fire to the building, destroying decades of carefully preserved history and survivor testimonies.
This two-part series tells Eva Kor's extraordinary story: Part 1 covers her childhood in Romania, her deportation to Auschwitz at age 10, her survival of Mengele's medical experiments, her post-war life, and her decision to create Indiana's only Holocaust museum. Part 2 (next episode) will cover the arson attack, the investigation, and Eva's response to having her life's work destroyed.
Key LocationsPrimary:
Secondary:
Eva Kor's Early Life:
Post-War & Immigration:
CANDLES Museum:
Eva Mozes Kor (1934-2019)
Miriam Mozes Zeiger (1934-1993)
Dr. Josef Mengele (1911-1979)
The Mozes Family

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