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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Élie Lévy
Born(1895-08-29)29 August 1895
Compiegne, France
Died24 January 1945(1945-01-24) (aged 49)
Republic of Poland
AllegianceFrance France
Battles/warsFirst and Second World Wars
AwardsCroix de Guerre, with palm, 1914-1918

Croix de Guerre, 1939-1945
Chevalier de la Légion d’honneur
Médaille militaire

Croix du combattant volontaire

Élie Lévy LdH, MM, CdG with palm, CdG, (1895-1945) was a French medical doctor who was a member of the French Resistance during the Second World War.

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Transcription

Early life

Élie Victor Amedee Lévy was born on 29 August 1895 at Compiegne, where his father was an engineer.

First World War

In 1914 Lévy joined the Zouaves aged 18 years old. At the front he was wounded three times by shrapnel and gassed. He was awarded a Croix de Guerre, with palm.

Inter war period

Lévy studied medicine and in 1922 moved to Paris specialising in paediatrics. He was also a graduate of the Institute of Forensic Medicine and Psychiatry at the University of Paris. He married in 1923 and had two daughters. In 1934 he moved with his family to Antibes.

Second World War

In 1939 aged 44 Lévy was mobilized as a reserve lieutenant in Castres, where he trained the young classes. In 1940 he served in the 3rd Mechanical Light Division in the Belgian campaign, in which he was awarded a Croix de Guerre with citation.

He returned to Antibes where created a Resistance network, and until mid 1942 his home in Antibes was a meeting point for numerous Resistance agents, and SOE agents when they arrived in France.

Lévy was the main organiser of the escape of a group of British officers from Lille prison in 1941.

In August 1941 he was recruited by Jacques Vaillant de Guélis to assist the Special Operations Executive SPINDLE Network in Cannes, having been recommended by Max Hymans. Lévy used the pseudonyms "Louis", "Philippe" and "Oscar".

In early 1942 he met Jean Moulin "Rex", envoy of General de Gaulle, who was parachuted in the evening of 1 January, and Peter Churchill, who arrived at his house on 10 January at the start of his first mission in France, and again on 21 April on his second mission when he brought two radio operators Isidore Newman «Julien» for the URCHIN network and Edward Zeff «Matthieu» for the SPRUCE network,[1] From April to July 1942 he hosted Maurice Pertschuk, a young officer of the SOE, future head of the Eugène-Prunus network in Toulouse and its region.

He helped numerous Resistance agents, including Emmanuel d'Astier de la Vigerie,[1] Yvon Morandat, Henri Frenay, and Philippe Roques. He assisted many SOE agents, to whom he provided false documents when they arrived in France, or lodging them before their departure by submarine; some were radio operators;[1] others brought in funds for the Resistance. For three days he sheltered three allied pilots, an American, a Pole, and an Englishman, who had been shot down. None spoke French and thanks to the Resistance they escaped and were able to reach Spain.

In summer 1942 Lévy and his wife left Antibes and went into hiding near Lake Laffrey (Isère), where he remained in the Resistance in Lyon.

After returning to Antibes, Lévy was arrested by Italian police on the 4 May 1943 and detained in secret in Nice. During an interrogation he found himself with Peter Churchill and others, but pretended not to know them. He was transferred to Imperia, where he had to break pebbles on the roads, then moved to Chiavari. Amedeo Rocchegiani, who sent money and helped Jewish and political prisoners, organised the escape of Lévy so that he could have found refuge in the hospital in Ancona, but he refused, having given his word as an officer not to escape.

In September 1943 the Italians transferred all political prisoners to the Germans. As a Jew, he was deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau II, where he endured fifteen months of hell.[2]

As Soviet troops were advancing in January 1945, the camp was evacuated and the inmates were sent on a "death march" which lasted 52 days, during which about a quarter died.[3] Lévy died on 24 January, having fallen exhausted on the road between Rybnik and Racibórz, and was probably shot.[2][4]

Recognition

Awards

World War I

France
Croix de Guerre with palm

World War II

France
Légion d'honneur (Chevalier)
France
Croix de Guerre
France
Médaille militaire

Monument

Monument commemorating the landing of Capt. Peter Churchill from HMS Unbroken at Cap d'Antibes on 21 April 1942
  • A plaque at Cap d'Antibes commemorating the landing of Capt. Peter Churchill from submarine HMS Unbroken on 21 April 1942 pays tribute to Levy.

References

  1. ^ a b c Duel of Wits, Peter Churchill
  2. ^ a b Letter dated 5 June 1945 written by Dr. Michel Schokter from Rumaucourt (Pas de Calais), describing the internment at Auschwitz, the living and working conditions and the evacuation of the camp lived in by Elie Lévy and his companions.
  3. ^ Longerich, Peter (2010). Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280436-5.
  4. ^ Strzelecki, Andrzej (2000). "The Liquidation of the Camp". In Długoborski, Wacław; Piper, Franciszek (eds.). Auschwitz, 1940–1945. Central Issues in the History of the Camp. Volume V: Epilogue. Oświęcim: Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. pp. 9–85.

Further reading

  • Documents-Témoignages-Recherche, publication of the Museum of the Resistance Azuréenne [ archive ], with a testimony of Raymonde Lévy, daughter of Élie Lévy.
  • Louis Aragon, The Killing, Gallimard, 1965, (ISBN 9782070202294). In this novel, Louis Aragon, a refugee writer in Nice (character of "Anthoine") with Elsa Triolet (character of "Fougère"), evokes Elie Lévy during the 1939-1940 war: they were then both officers of the body of health in June/July 1940 (Levy as a doctor, Aragon as auxiliary).
  • Claude Bourdet, The Uncertain Adventure - From Resistance to Restoration, Stock, 1975.
  • Thomas Rabino, The Map Network - History of a network of anti-German, anti-Gaullist, anti-communist and anticollaborationist Resistance, Perrin, 2008, (ISBN 978-2-262-02646-2).
This page was last edited on 4 January 2024, at 16:48
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