Happy Birthday, Sister André Randon! 🥳

The Daughter of Charity, world’s oldest nun, the oldest European, and the second-oldest person in the world turned 118 on Fri., Feb. 11, 2022. She celebrated with a glass of wine and some chocolate.

Sr. André, who is blind and in a wheelchair, also survived Covid-19 last year. What a warrior!

[See also: Join ChurchPOP on Telegram!]

After contracting Covid-19, Sr. André told BFM Television that she “wasn’t scared” because she “wasn’t scared to die…”

“I’m happy to be with you, but I would wish to be somewhere else – join my big brother and my grandfather and my grandmother.”

About Sister André

Born Lucile Randon on Feb. 11, 1904, Sr. André converted to Catholicism at age 19. At age 25, she began caring for elderly and orphans at a French hospital. She later entered the Daughters of Charity at age 40.

She has been a sister for 78 years!

[See also: Follow ChurchPOP on GETTR!]

Sr. André moved in 2009 to Sainte-Catherine Labouré retirement home in Toulon, France, where she spent her birthday.

Here’s a video from a French news outlet below:

Click here if you cannot see the video above.

Here’s the translation:

Sister André: “I am thinking of withdrawing from this matter, but they don’t want [me] to. You have a lifetime contract, my sister!”

France 24 Narration:

“She is one of the oldest women in the world. The dean of the French but also vice-dean of humanity has no health problem. Apart from muscle and joint stiffness, she has very few daily treatments. She was 14 years old when the Spanish flu was raging in 1918.

“More than a century later, she survived Covid-19, which just made her a little tired. Although she is resistant, Sister André wishes to ‘die quickly’.”

Sister Andre: “I had the freedom, but it’s terrible not to be able to make a gesture alone”

David Tavella, member of management of the I’Ehpad: “We caregivers, who are in contact with these people, we conclude that finally longevity is perhaps not a desirable thing. Obviously when you love your loved ones, you want to be with them as long as possible, but how will you be at that time? We must listen to the elderly.”

France 24 Narration:

“Sister André, born Lucile Randon, is one of approximately 30,000 centenarians recorded in France. In the world, there were half a million centenarians in 2015 and there could be 25 million in 2100. Science has still not managed to unravel the secret of this longevity.”

But as Sister André says, the most important thing in life is:

Sister Andre: “To share a great love and not to compromise on his needs. That’s what is the main thing.”

Say a prayer for Sister André!

Follow ChurchPOP:

Telegram Channel
GETTR
Gab
Parler
Signal Group
WhatsApp Group 1
WhatsApp Group 2

ChurchPOP Facebook Group
Email List

[See also: “I Wasn’t Scared”: World’s Oldest Nun Survives Covid-19, Celebrates 117th Birthday]

[See also: The World’s Oldest Nun Celebrates 116th Birthday – Here’s Her Secret to Happiness]

Share this post