I own her books and she’s made a difference in my life. Great lessons.
@andrewlowe296210 күн бұрын
What are the titles called of her books?
@olivillarroel377218 күн бұрын
Wow what a way to celebrate the 500 episode. Thanks so much. Shalom
@leilanikraushaar111118 күн бұрын
Wow, what a wise elder and expression of love and forgiveness.
@evelynsnell229318 күн бұрын
Only 15 minutes in and already my heart is full to bursting with love. This dear woman is an angel❤
@deborahshechter293011 күн бұрын
Thank you Rangan for posting this again. I was moved to tears this time as well. A special thank you for sharing your private conversation with her at the end. I truly appreciate what you do to inspire the world to live better lives. All the best.
@miaash387017 күн бұрын
So much wisdom in this beautiful lady! Her beautiful face is a clear indication that this lovely lady holds zero grudges against anyone! Edith has aged so gracefully!
@THFrenchteacher18 күн бұрын
A timely conversation, especially in my country where hate and fear are used as tools to control the masses. If only we could learn from the past rather than repeat it. She has such wisdom. Thank you! 🙏
@janespitfire988418 күн бұрын
OMG! This was so enriching listening for me. Thank you both!!
@nancyhynes877518 күн бұрын
There is so much in this conversation. Thank you both.
@shamimgough171416 күн бұрын
Best podcast interview I've ever heard. To survive what she went through and tell the story😢 Thank you
@majamilosevic-nl3zy8 күн бұрын
So beautiful conversation! I've heard for the first time for this gorgeous wise lady! I agree Rangan, she is so inspirational! What wisdom, hope, without resentment, just sheer love! Thank you a lot Rangan!
@oldie530018 күн бұрын
What a wise and beautiful lady; such an inspiration. Thank you so much Edith ❤❤❤❤❤
@MicheleDeCant17 күн бұрын
Wow. Thanks for this episode. How special and honored I feel to be able to watch this...and really think on her messages!!!! Wow.
@anthonyt717316 күн бұрын
Love through Compassion ❤🙏
@mickeylana5 күн бұрын
As powerful as you said it would be...I think about how my school made a point of teaching us about the Holocaust in age-appropriate ways starting in third grade and how much it affected me as a person, then and now. We are so lucky to have voices like Edith.
@TSis7618 күн бұрын
What a wonderful woman😊❤
@karenharvey44217 күн бұрын
Bless you, Edith. Age 63 now, I first visited an exhibition, as a sixteen year old, at a church in my home town. I sat, prayed and cried in confusion how humans could do that to another human. I learned that the reverend who came to talk to me had been a naval chaplain in World War Two. Later, frrom the account of an uncle who was sent to liberate Belsen, I had the 'opportunity' to go there in 1987 (before the Berlin wall came down) with my soon to be husband. I was profoundly moved by the sheer numbers in each grave and the casual labels per race, or creed. My uncle had been a prison warder, before the army, but retrained as a Mental Health Nurse on his return. I instantly connected to your sister's life saving words, "The spirit never dies.' Further there is so many constructive ways forward for many in different situations. I am struggling with grief at the moment and our twenty three years old son is still in education; delayed by COVID, so has another three and half years to go; including finding work placements before he can support himself. I shall make sure he listens to this discussion so that we can put things in some context, while still allowing ourselves to grieve. Also, I shall be sharing this with my friends, family, previous colleagues and two ex bosses with the question, "When did YOUR childhood end?" Hopefully, we can all share something to realise "all we have is each other" and hope that some effort to be "for many things" rather than against them makes a positive enough difference to counter so much anger causing hatred in the world. PLUS, your book is on my list as an essential life tool to pass down to my child and potential grand-children. 💚💙💜 Namaste xx ❤
@susankemppinen16 күн бұрын
Blessings and thank you both. I love Edi, have all her books . Blessings and love xx
@raunopukonen581118 күн бұрын
Such a beautiful soul ❤️
@lauraisabelarranz25264 күн бұрын
I like all your videos, but this one is really amazing and LOVELY, thanks to share it ❤️
@yurihernandez53315 күн бұрын
Beautiful 😍 ❤thank you so much
@monicaallmond260618 күн бұрын
“The more I suffer, the more stronger I become.”
@swatimahajan30068 күн бұрын
Beautiful conversation
@adriennf52514 күн бұрын
Edith Eva Eger 🥰🥰 Wisfom in all of her words
@bevvanderhoven12314 күн бұрын
I'm hanging on every word spoken between the two of you. Such a gift this interview. So much depth. So much wisdom for me as I am learning to navigate the loss of my mother and all the issues that go with it. Please someone...send me the title of this book written that I may go buy it and find more wisdom ❤
@dianefu63729 күн бұрын
The Choice
@andrewlowe296210 күн бұрын
Wow, buckets of wise and kindness.
@channahcastelobranco18 күн бұрын
Amazing women.. ❤
@josephang164216 күн бұрын
one of the best!!!
@starkereality6917 күн бұрын
BRILLIANT!!!
@shudyouzzef16 күн бұрын
Hope your next guest is Dr. Norman Finkelstein. He’s a man of honor who stands for JUSTICE and deeply values HUMANITY 💪🏻
@dinaschumacher638414 күн бұрын
He is full o hate!
@saskiakarels418418 күн бұрын
At 16 minutes: We don't all have these fathers to rely on ofcourse. I've grown up without grandfathers and with secrets and shame (and kind of half a father and how much of a mother I think now❤❤ Ilove them so much🎉 more every day)... my parents had a tough time growing up 'without fathers' during and after wartime and they didn't know how to give us what they didn't know... they 'did what they could' and it felt good at the time... nowadays I got such a different field I am in and I love it: this family pain* was needed to get me shift to love and see that scatteredness brings all together again. ❤🎉❤ *paint(?) said my phone 😂😂😂 what's the colour of pain?
@Loz-oh3us15 күн бұрын
Forgiveness- gives yourself a freedom - you become untouchable by the vengeful people who create suffering. Forgiveness is the antidote against evil.
@jenniferroy628818 күн бұрын
I saw you speak at Dr. Edith’s conference. I’m the author of a book about the story of my aunt’s childhood in the Holocaust. When you finally met Dr. Edie in person , I cried. When you told your story, I thought it was one of the best testaments to the gift not only of Dr. Edie, but of your connection and responsibility to sharing wisdom and love.
@pamelajoy6716 күн бұрын
Beautiful.
@miaash387017 күн бұрын
No subtitles! What about the viewers/listeners who are hard of hearing?
@tekbahadurdura521112 күн бұрын
Wow incredible ❤🎉
@poff934513 күн бұрын
"You can't cover garlic with chocolate, you can't heal what you can't feel. Don't medicate." One simple line in a steam of wisdom. Imagine what this one nugget could give to the world if it got into the right regulatory body.
@Vonsat14 күн бұрын
I just visited Auschwitz 2 weeks ago and it was really sad to walk around the premises knowing what had taken place here decades ago.
@AbnehmenmitRosita18 күн бұрын
The link to "make change.." is not working 😢
@peterdollins361018 күн бұрын
My mother died or was--Robert Graves was more suspicious than me-- killed when I was two years ten months old, I think my childhood ended there. The way my father told me was hard but it was too much for him. My mother-caught or was given puerperal fever so she went mad, and died. Hazel, my mother, was so brilliant she was the only one could stand to Professor Haldene--see 'On Being the Right Size'-in our Taunton CP group. I thnk madness is one thing that breaks the spirit. I am now writing about my childhood--lots of trauma and drama--ending after I try to kill my foul step-mother aged six I do not forgive the people who killed or were responsible for my mother's death nor my step-mother, Edna. I will buy and read Edith's books--if I can.
@tarzan90-h7u17 күн бұрын
Do I hear they say that shes 93 y, but the title of this video says 97. Holocost survivors story is so important.
@starkereality6917 күн бұрын
93 at time of interview - this is a celebration replay 4 years on...
@tarzan90-h7u17 күн бұрын
@starkereality69 aha ok thanks
@nancycole-auguste661413 күн бұрын
Beauty and brains. She's pretty
@michelletewhata776818 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@nancyhynes877518 күн бұрын
FYI - The link for the masterclass & 10 question worksheet isn't working.
@DrChatterjeeRangan18 күн бұрын
So sorry about this Nancy. The correct link is here: drchatterjee.com/books/make-change-that-lasts/
@magdagomez86713 күн бұрын
Please, subtitles in Spanish❤❤❤
@laurensmith573314 күн бұрын
❤
@soshea565516 күн бұрын
🙏🙏🙏🙏
@MechanicsAndCarpentry36915 күн бұрын
I'm not sure how it happened but for some reason I became unsubscribed from you. Amazing interview. Thank U.
@ClareLeamore18 күн бұрын
❤🧡💛💚💙💜🤍
@mbrylewski17 күн бұрын
We only need to look at Putin to realise that we or leaders have learnt nothing
@ulgengokalp905014 күн бұрын
Why doesnt she help to stop same sufferıng ın Gaza now?
@fredvinci707114 күн бұрын
😂😂😂 such a bs. Stop using f..n war and concentrate on the crime that her people are doing to others, and u young man should be ashame on reporting exactly what the entire world is suffering from their beastly hands