March 14, 1940 · March 4, 2026
"She did not merely endure this life — she overcame it,
testimony by testimony, victory by victory."
The family welcomes all who loved Victorine and were touched by her life to join in celebrating a life lived victoriously in faith, service, and love.
Victorine V. Ewing was born on March 14, 1940, in Trinidad and Tobago — the second of eight children and the oldest daughter, raised in the village of Movant. Her name is French for victory, and she lived every moment of it.
In 1959, she made history as part of the inaugural class of women police officers in Trinidad, serving with distinction for over two decades. Even in uniform, she was first and foremost a minister of the Gospel, sharing her faith with those she arrested, those she served, and everyone in between. In 1972, she married St. Elmo Hilton Ewing, beginning a partnership of fifty-four years.
She retired from the police service in 1980 to raise her family and, together with her husband, co-founded Ewing's Supermarket — a community landmark built on prayer, integrity, and the conviction that business could be a platform for the Kingdom of God. In 1988, she immigrated to the United States, settling in the Atlanta area.
When told in 1994 that she had six months to live, she laughed and replied, "We are all going to die someday." She then lived for decades more.
She faced congestive heart failure, three heart attacks, and a ministroke — each of which her doctors struggled to explain, and each of which she survived with characteristic grace, humor, and an undiminished desire to pray for whoever was in the room. She traveled to Israel, hiked Mount Masada, and did water aerobics six days a week well into her later years.
She was a master cook, a fierce intercessor, a mentor to many, and a mother to all who needed one. Young women found shelter and love in her home. Strangers became family at her table. Her children never left the house without being anointed with oil and covered in prayer.
Victorine is survived by a beloved husband, devoted children, and eighteen grandchildren — and by a vast community of friends, spiritual children, and lives permanently changed by her love and prayer.
Preceded in death by her son, Ronny Ewing.
Victorine Ewing did not merely endure this life — she overcame it, testimony by testimony, victory by victory, exactly as her name promised she would.
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Vybez Event Center · 7300 Stonecrest Concourse, Suite 105, Stonecrest, GA 30038
Following the burial — Saturday, March 14, 2026