The Life of Edith Davidovici
Born Edith Stern — nicknamed Gitele — , Nyíregyháza, Hungary
Origins
Edith was born into a devout Orthodox Jewish family. Her father, Rabbi Yehuda Leibish Stern (1888–1964), served as rabbi of the Rashi Synagogue in Paris. Her mother, Reitzel Rosette Schlesinger (1896–1956), came from Tokaj, Hungary. The family moved to Paris where Edith grew up steeped in faith, scholarship, and the warmth of a close-knit community.
War & Survival
When France fell, the family fled south under false identities. In April 1944, Edith was arrested by the Gestapo in Lyon and deported on Convoy 72 to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where she received the tattoo number 80661. She endured selections, forced labor, death marches, and transfer to the Ravensbrück and Neustadt-Glewe camps before liberation. Her first husband was murdered at Auschwitz.
Life After
Against all odds, Edith survived and was reunited with her parents, brother, and sisters. She rebuilt her life, married Shlomo Tzvi Davidovici in 1947, and together they raised five children. Decades later, at the urging of her daughter Roselyne, she wrote her memoir Vivre après la Shoah — a testament to resilience and the duty of memory.
Honors & Legacy
On December 31, 2003, Edith was named Knight of the Legion of Honor — France's highest distinction — in recognition of her courage and her contribution to Holocaust remembrance. She passed away on February 1, 2008, in Antwerp, Belgium, at the age of 83. Her words endure as a bridge between the world that was destroyed and those who must never forget.