Yes, let’s lock up a concentration camp survivor for a peaceful protest and keep ignoring those who vandalized and terrorize Catholic churches and pregnancy centers.
Edl previously told Live Action she found out about abortion clinics in 1988: “I said to my husband, ‘these are the death camps of America.’ I saw people sitting in front of abortion clinics in Atlanta, and I’ve been involved ever since.”
"I wrote about the DOJ charging peaceful protesters at a Tennessee abortion clinic in 2021 for supposedly violating the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act.
"I also reminded you guys the FBI and DOJ consistently ignore the violence and terror caused by abortion-obsessed people toward Catholic churches and pregnancy centers.
"Among those arrested and charged is Eva Edl, an 87-year-old concentration camp survivor. Live Action provided more information on her. What a fascinating and robust woman who endured and survived true evil:
Edl’s biography by James Johnston, “She Looks Like My Little Girl,” offers the testimony of a child of Danube-Swabian heritage — Yugoslavian by birth but German by heritage and language. Edl was just six years old when the Nazis invaded Yugoslavia and her family was safe in their rural home — until her father was taken by the Nazis.
After her father became ill and was put in an infirmary, he sent his family a letter urging them to flee because the Red Army was coming. But they did not escape in time. Edl says she and her family were dehumanized by the communists and targeted for genocide. At first, she and her siblings found safety with their grandmother who was Hungarian and therefore able to hide in plain sight. But soon, Edl’s mother was kidnapped to dig trenches for the war and her two older siblings were taken to a forced labor camp. As for Edl, she and her grandmother were put on a train to a concentration camp.
Edl’s bio explains further: