There is something that breaks the codes in Jonathan Denis.
Red tie, multi-colored socks, this young forty-something stands out at the Association for the Right to Die with Dignity (ADMD).
A man who chairs a collective made up largely of women, campaigning since 1980 in favor of the legalization of euthanasia.
Young in addition, while within the ADMD "the average age exceeds 65 years", he says in his office where two portraits of personalities, Guy Bedos and Line Renaud, past and present activists hang on the wall. present from the ADMD.
Do you have to be old to talk about death?
In the book he is publishing this Thursday, “Dying with dignity”
(Ed. Le Cherche-Midi, 144 p., 18 euros)
, Jonathan Denis brilliantly proves the opposite.
At the heart of the news - Emmanuel Macron, at the beginning of the month, committed to passing a law on active assistance in dying - the work reveals to us why, at the age of 30, he joined this association, strong of 77,000 members, who are fighting so that the French can choose the conditions of their end of life.
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