 The day she found out she was free was a day she would never forget. My name is India and today we are going to meet a woman who escaped one of humanity's greatest atrocities, the Holocaust. Here in Israel, we came to visit a woman named Trudy Asher. An 86-year-old Holocaust survivor. And she is here to tell her story. I was born in a small village named Lach-Tepel in Holland, in the German village. And we were the only Jewish family there. And it was very nice. Until the Nazis invaded the Netherlands. At that time, all Jews were required to have a jay put on their IDs. And Trudy was forced to go to a Jewish school separate from the other kids. Everything had changed. They were suddenly forced to stay in the Bokeh in Delitz. And my father died. My father was a German soldier. They told my father, five minutes, five cents, you have to go three days to work. Her father never returned. From then on, Trudy and her family spent their lives escaping the Nazis. They ran from house to house, hiding. They took us all the way. My mother was on the right, and I was on the left. From the bottom to the bottom. You can't see anything. You don't know what. He left. He left. He saw me. He said, you know, you're coming from there. And then he asked, why are you leaving? I said, I'm afraid of you. He left from the bottom to the bottom. Miraculously, Trudy and her mother were not taken by the Nazi soldier. But her mother was not so fortunate the next time. If there was a Jewish Jew, he would leave. And once someone left him. And if he saw a Jewish Jew, he would say, Oh, hello, Jacob. What do you want me to do today? This man knew the real identity of Trudy's mother, since he had known her from before the war. So he said, I'm sorry. Trudy, I'm going to the 10th grade and you're going to the 11th grade. Despite getting a second chance, the Nazis caught Trudy's mother soon after. She went to Auschwitz and was sent straight to a gas chamber. Trudy lived life in hiding for three years. But then the day came, the day it all ended. In April, there was a meeting there. And Rai was standing in front of the hallelujah, and then he came home, and I called him in the name of Fris Heidt. So he said, Yadonet, let's go outside. I said, no, I'm sorry, I'm not going outside. And I came out, the outside, and went to the meeting room. A lot of Rai was standing in front of the hall, and then he was sitting in front of the meeting room. Malay Malay Anishin Museum. Trudy escaped what so many others could not. And after being free, Trudy eventually moved to Israel. Meeting Trudy has been one of the greatest honors of my life, especially since it is my first time meeting a Holocaust survivor. As you look at her, you can see the story her eyes tell, surviving here to end up here. There are less than 180,000 Holocaust survivors left in the world today. And that number is quickly declining. That is why we must share stories like Trudy's so that we will never forget or repeat the Holocaust. Thanks for watching, and I'll see you next time.