On January 17th of this year Sister André Randon, a French nun of the Daughters of Charity, died in her sleep. She was 118 years old, just a few weeks short of her 119th birthday. She was born on February 11th, 1904 (the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes).
At the time of her death she was, officially, the world’s oldest person—
“La Doyenne de l’Humanité”. Before that she had successively reached the status of France’s oldest person, the oldest nun, and—at the age of 117—the oldest person to survive a bout of COVID-19. She had tested positive but experienced no symptoms.
Although the aging process had deprived Sr. André of her eye-sight and her mobility, she was still of sound mind, her present-day awareness and all of the memories of her long life still intact. She was born into a French Protestant family in the city of Ales. She and her twin sister were the youngest children (there were three older brothers). Her given name was Lucile.
Lucile and her twin sister became mortally ill at 18 months. The sister died, but Lucile, against the odds, survived. At the age of 12 she was sent to work as a governess in the city of Marseilles.
In her mid-twenties she experienced a religious conversion and became a Catholic. Then, in 1944, she entered the convent to became a Daughter of Charity. She was forty years old. The name she took in religion was André, after one of her older brothers, who was much distressed over her decision to become a Catholic Sister.
As a Daughter of Charity, Sister André worked in the care of the sick, the elderly, orphaned children, and wounded military veterans. Even after retiring she continued to work in one of the Order’s nursing homes until she was 100 years old.
If she had not lived to such a record-age, her life would have no doubt remained hidden from the world-at-large. But her moment in the limelight revealed something of the great value of a life spent in faithful service to Christ, the love of Christ being the chief motive. St. Thérese of Lisieux believed that God purposefully keeps hidden the lives of some of His greatest saints. They do not even become known to the Church and their glory will not be seen until the Last Day. They are among His divine secrets.
The world-at-large looks at Sr. André Randon and exclaims, “Wow! She lived to 118! And she liked hot chocolate too!” As Christians, we should look at her life and be moved to thoughts of
Te Deum laudamus!
(We praise Thee, O God…). For her 117th birthday, Pope Francis sent her a pair of rosary beads which she cherished and used to pray. A great consoling thought this: the oldest person in the world, consecrated to Christ in the Evangelical Counsels, praying her rosary beads from the Pope, praying for the intentions of the world until the end of her days.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
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Newton, MA 02464
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