Survivor of Communist Concentration Camp Makes Peace With Dying in U.S. Prison Over Peaceful Pro-life Protest

A Christian pro-life activist who survived a communist concentration camp in post-war Yugoslavia is now making peace with the possibility she may not outlast the Biden administration.

Eva Edl, 88, has long been familiar with the consequences of dehumanization. After the Nazi forces were routed in Europe and the war at large was coming to an end, Edl, not yet 10 years old, was tossed into one of communist dictator Josip “Tito” Broz’s concentration camps in Yugoslavia along with thousands of other Danube Schwabians who had been collectively branded as Nazi collaborators by Tito’s communist Partisans and targeted for their German ethnic backgrounds.

Edl told WJBF-TV, “We were considered to be non-human. It was just permission for torture and killing by the government.”

In camp Gakowa, Edl indicated she ended up losing all of the skin on her legs and was hobbled by sores. “People gagged when they came near me,” she said. “The flies and the fleas and the lice, and the bed bugs just loved this festering body.”

Edl and her remaining family members ultimately managed to escape into Austria. After spending several years in refugee camps, they made it to the United States where she now might die in prison for defending the lives of the biggest cohort of dehumanized people, slaughtered by the tens of millions globally every year. (Read more from “Survivor of Communist Concentration Camp Makes Peace With Dying in U.S. Prison Over Peaceful Pro-life Protest” HERE)