Holocaust survivor and Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient Gerda Weissmann Klein died on Sunday at age 97.

Born in 1924 in Poland, she survived three Nazi concentration camps, where she almost died from exhaustion, overwork and a forced death march through her native country, Germany, and the Czech Republic. Though she survived, both of her parents and brother died in the Holocaust. After World War II, she married Kurt Klein, a soldier and one of her American liberators, and they moved to the United States.

The film won an Emmy for Outstanding Informational Special and an Oscar for Best Documentary (Short Subject). “One Survivor Remembers” is now part of the National Film Registry and is available for educators as a part of the Southern Poverty Law Center’s Teaching Tolerance program, according to Deadline.

In 1997, Weissmann Klein was appointed to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Governing Council by then-President Bill Clinton.

Gerda Weissmann at age 11 in Bielsko, Poland, 1935. Credit: Hyper hippie via Wikimedia Commons.
Gerda Weissmann at age 11 in Bielsko, Poland, 1935. Credit: Hyper hippie via Wikimedia Commons.

In 2011, Weissmann Klein was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom—the highest civilian honor in the United States. At the presentation ceremony, Obama stated that the Holocaust survivor “has taught the world that it is often in our most hopeless moments that we discover the extent of our strength and the depth of our love.”

She is survived by three children, eight grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren.

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