
Lily Ebert, the Hungarian-born Holocaust survivor who educated millions on TikTok and cultivated a late-in-life friendship with King Charles III, died Oct. 9 at her home in London. She was 100.
Ebert’s death was announced by her great-grandson Dov Forman, who helped make her into a social media phenomenon in her final years.
“In the face of unimaginable loss, Safta made a promise to herself,” Forman shared in a letter on behalf of the family, using the Hebrew word for grandmother. “If she survived that hell on earth, she would tell her story-not with anger, but with strength, dignity, and the determination to honor those who did not. Never has a promise been so profoundly fulfilled as hers.”
Ebert was 20 when she was deported to Auschwitz in 1944, where she was separated from her mother Nina, her younger sister Berta, and her younger brother Bela, who were all sent to the gas chambers. Lily and her two other sisters were transferred to a munitions factory in Leipzig and liberated in 1945. After the war, they headed to Switzerland and then to Israel shortly before independence.
Lily was reunited with her older brother, also a Holocaust survivor, in 1953, and eventually made a life in Britain, moving there in 1967. She gave testimony at museums and universities and co-wrote a book about her experience with Forman, one of 38 great-grandchildren among her descendants.
In addition to the great-grandchildren, Ebert is predeceased by one daughter and survived by a daughter, a son, 10 grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.
One of those great-grandchildren is Forman, with whom she co-created a TikTok account to educate social media users on the Holocaust and the prevalence of antisemitism. Forman was 16 at the time they created the account in 2021; it now has 2 million followers.
Over the years, the account featured Ebert showing off Jewish foods including challah and rugelach, celebrating various Jewish holidays and, crucially, telling and retelling her Holocaust story, often in the form of trends popular on the platform.
The account also documented as Ebert grew progressively weak, including over the course of several hospitalizations. After each, Forman would triumphantly report her return to health.
On her 100th birthday last Dec. 29, the account quoted Ebert as saying, “I never thought I would survive Auschwitz. Now I celebrate 100 surrounded by my large and loving family. The Nazis did not win!”
—Jackie Hajdenberg / JTA



