As Eleanor Roosevelt's friend, confidant, personal physician,
housemate, and traveling companion during her post-White House
years, Dr. David Gurewitsch ultimately became one of the most
important figures in the latter part of ER's life.
Born to Russian-Jewish immigrant parents, Gurewitsch
attended medical school in his native Switzerland and then
practiced
medicine in British-administered Palestine, before coming
to the United States in the 1930s. In the U.S., he worked
for a number of hospitals in the New York area in the late
1930s, joining the staff of the Neurological Institute
at
Columbia-Presbyterian, in addition to maintaining a private
medical practice of his own. Numbered among his personal
patients was Trude Lash, the wife of ER's close friend Joseph
Lash. While visiting the Lashes in New York City in
1944, ER became acquainted with Gurewitsch, and when
she
relocated there after FDR's
death she asked him to be her personal physician, as well.
Gurewitsch and ER were cordial and friendly, but their
friendship did not begin in earnest until late in 1947 when
Gurewitsch was diagnosed with tuberculosis and needed to
return to Switzerland for treatment. Unable to find adequate
passage on his own, ER arranged for him to travel with her
on the same plane that was taking her to Geneva for a meeting
of the UN Commission on
Human Rights. When the plane was grounded because of
heavy fog in Ireland, ER took care of the sick doctor and
over the course of their two-day delay a bond was struck
that would last until ER's death in 1962.
Gurewitsch was an open and sympathetic man, and ER felt
comfortable confiding in him many of her anxieties and preoccupations.
They corresponded with each other regularly and, over the
next fifteen years, Gurewitsch would accompany ER to no
fewer than thirteen different countries on her international
trips. In the late 1950s, Gurewitsch and his new wife, Edna
Perkel Gurewitsch, jointly purchased a townhouse with ER
on Manhattan's Upper East Side, revealing just how close
ER had become with the Gurewitsches, especially David. As
ER battled severe anemia and tuberculosis of the bone marrow,
she increasingly relied on Gurewitsch for medical and emotional
support. He remained her primary physician until her death
on November 7, 1962.
Gurewitsch later expanded his expertise by becoming the
UN's first medical director and then
as an adviser to Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare
Abraham Ribicoff. Gurewitsch died in New York City in 1974.
Sources:
Beasley, Maurine, Holly C. Schulman and Henry R. Beasley,
eds. The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia. Westport,
Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2001, 219-221.
Gurewitsch, Edna. Kindred Spirits. New York:
St. Martin's Press, 2002, passim.
Lash, Joseph. Eleanor: The Years Alone. New York:
W.W. Norton & Company, 1972, 182-183, 201-203, 305-306,
324-332.