This is the story of Jack and Genia Grinbaum. This book isn’t just a re-telling of their Holocaust experiences. It isn’t simply an appeal to remember the six million. While the incredible stories of their survival are detailed in this book and it is a reminder of the horrifying atrocities committed by the Nazi’s, “The Everyday Remember” is about the spirit that carries on. We can Honor this Legacy as a part of our everyday life, the principles we live by and the values we promote. Jack and Genia survived years of torture and cruelty. When liberated, they still had to fear for their lives as Displaced Persons with no homeland to return to. They had nothing, not a single possession except the clothes they were wearing. As Jack and Genia tried to move on they were getting final confirmation of the deaths of their parents, brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts, uncles and friends. They moved forward with nothing except the skills they had from the old country, profound sadness and a fighting spirit to not just survive, but to thrive. There were physical and psychological hardships that would follow them but there was also an elegant charm that they would carry through life and pass along to family, friends and everyone else that they would encounter. $4.99 on Kindle.