She was born on 22 April 1916 in Oger, France; she was the youngest of seven siblings in a family of agricultural workers originating from the Reims area. In 1938 she began working as a teacher at Gionges, and as secretary to the mayor there. During May 1940, as the Battle of France began, she fled the area, but returned two months later.
Wartime activities
As a Resistance worker in occupied France, Lundy began supplying forged official documents to escapees from the camp at Bazancourt and to Jewish families. She assisted the Communist Marcel Nautré, and others involved in the :fr:Possum |Possum network, in avoiding detection by the authorities, as well as providing shelter at her brother Georges' farm for Free French fighters parachuted into the region. Lundy was arrested on 19 June 1944 in her classroom at Gionges and was interrogated by the Gestapo at Châlons-sur-Marne, where she was subsequently imprisoned. During the interrogation, to protect her brothers and sister who were also working for the resistance, she pretended to be an only child. From there she was taken to Romainville, and, on 18 July 1944, was deported, first to SaarbrückenNeue Bremm, and then to the Ravensbrück concentration camp. On 16 November of the same year, she was transferred to the Schlieben subcamp of Buchenwald. Her sister Berthe was also imprisoned in Germany and her elder brother Lucien was interned at Auschwitz concentration camp; they both survived, but her other brother, Georges, did not and died at Auschwitz-Birkenau in 1945. Yvette Lundy was freed from Schlieben by the Red Army on 20 or 21 April 1945 and, after a march of some 200 kilometres to Halle, was flown back to France, arriving at le Bourget on 8 May 1945.
Post-war
Lundy remained silent about her war experiences until 1959, for her family's sake. After that date, she began going into schools to share her testimony. Her visits proved extremely popular with pupils. Lundy's memoir Le Fil de l'araignée, co-written with Laurence Barbarot-Boisson, was published in 2012. At the age of 101, she was awarded the honour of Grand Officier de la Légion d'honneur. She died on 3 November 2019 at Epernay, aged 103.