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World's oldest woman dies at 118

2023-01-17T23:10:17.120Z


Sister André is no longer alive. The French woman was considered the oldest person in the world. Last year she had survived a corona infection.


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Sister André: Died in her sleep

Photo:

Nicolas Tucat / dpa

French nun André, thought to be the world's oldest person, has died at the age of 118.

She died in her sleep in a retirement home in Toulon in southern France on Tuesday night, said the head of the facility, David Tavella, on Tuesday evening of the AFP news agency.

'There is great sadness, but she wanted it, it was her wish, to go to her beloved brother.

It is a liberation for them.” The Reuters news agency also reported Sister André's death, citing the home.

The nun, real name Lucile Randon, survived two world wars and the Spanish flu.

Since the death of Japanese Kane Tanaka last April, she has been considered the oldest person in the world.

The French celebrated her 118th birthday on February 11th.

Shortly before her 117th birthday, she had survived a corona infection.

She didn't have many symptoms, spokesman Tavella told the French press at the time.

There had been a major outbreak in the home, and several residents had died.

"I was very, very tired for a while," Sister André told BFM TV.

But she wasn't afraid of dying.

The nun was born on February 11, 1904 in Alès, southern France, into a family of Protestant origin.

It was not until she was a young adult that she was baptized Catholic.

At the age of about 40 she joined the order of the Vincentians.

She worked for more than three decades in a hospital in the city of Vichy, caring for orphans and the elderly.

She later moved to Toulon.

In an interview on her 116th birthday, she described the end of the First World War as one of the most beautiful events of her life, when her two brothers returned home unharmed: »That was very rare, there were more likely to be two dead than two alive.«

Even after she went blind and was in a wheelchair, Sister André cared for other elderly people who were significantly younger than herself for a long time. »People say that work kills, but work kept me alive.

I worked until I was 108,” she said in an interview with journalists last year.

She also called for more charity: “People should help each other and love each other instead of hating each other.

Then everything would be much better.«

Since the end of April last year, the Gerontology Research Group has listed Sister André as the oldest living person, previously as the oldest European.

With her death, the 115-year-old Maria Branyas Morera, who lives in Spain, is now the oldest person in the world in the ranking of the Association of Researchers.

sol/dpa/AFP

Source: spiegel

All life articles on 2023-01-17

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