Lucile Randon facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Lucile Randon
|
|
---|---|
Randon as a young woman in the 1920s
|
|
Born |
Lucile Randon
11 February 1904 Alès, France
|
Died | (aged 118 years, 340 days) Toulon, France
|
17 January 2023
Other names | Sister André |
Occupation | Catholic nun |
Known for | Oldest known living person (19 April 2022 – 17 January 2023) |
Lucile Randon DC ( 11 February 1904 – 17 January 2023), also known as Sister André (French: Sœur André), was a French supercentenarian. Living to the age of 118 years and 340 days, she had been the world's oldest verified living person since 19 April 2022, following the death of Kane Tanaka. She was the oldest known survivor of the COVID-19 pandemic, having tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 a month before her 117th birthday.
Randon was a Roman Catholic nun, having converted to Roman Catholicism as a young adult, working as a governess, teacher, and missionary before retiring at the age of 75. She resided in a nursing home in Toulon, France, from 2009 until her death in 2023.
Biography
Randon was born on 11 February 1904 in Alès, France, to Paul Randon and Alphonsine Delphine Yéta Soutoul. Her living siblings included three older brothers and a twin sister named Lydie, who died a year after they were born. Lucile became a governess to three children in Marseille when she was twelve years old in 1916. She took on more responsibility when she was hired as both a governess and teacher to a prominent family at Versailles in 1922. Her work as a governess and teacher at Versailles lasted until 1936.
Randon grew up in a Protestant family and her grandfather was a pastor. She converted to Catholicism in 1923 at the age of 19. She later joined the Catholic order Daughters of Charity in 1944, taking the name Sister André in honour of her elder brother. After World War II ended, Randon went on a mission to a hospital in Vichy, where she served orphans and elders. Her mission lasted 18 years until she was sent to another hospital at La Baume-d'Hostun, Drôme, for night duty in 1963. Randon retired from full-time work in 1979 and entered the EHPAD in the Marches at Savoie, where she continued to care for the elderly until she was 100 years old. She moved to a retirement home in Toulon on 25 October 2009, at the age of 105.
Health and longevity
Randon was latterly blind and used a wheelchair from the early 2010s. In January 2021, Randon tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in an outbreak at her retirement home. She was asymptomatic and tested negative days before her 117th birthday, making her the oldest known survivor of the COVID-19 pandemic.
After the death of Honorine Rondello on 19 October 2017, she became the oldest living person in France. When she turned 115 in 2019, Pope Francis sent her a personal letter and blessed rosary. In 2021, she said she was happy at her home, although she wished to join her grandparents and brother André in heaven.
On her 118th birthday in February 2022, Randon received a birthday note from French president Emmanuel Macron. On 19 April 2022, she became the world's oldest verified living person after the death of Kane Tanaka. She felt this was a "sad honour", saying: "I feel I would be better off in heaven, but the good Lord doesn’t want me yet." At that time she was reported to still eat chocolate and drink a glass of wine each day.
Randon died in her sleep at her nursing home in Toulon on 17 January 2023, at the age of 118 years and 340 days. At the time of her death, she was the fourth-oldest authenticated person ever. Following her death, María Branyas Morera became the world's oldest validated living person.
See also
In Spanish: Lucile Randon para niños
- List of French supercentenarians
- List of European supercentenarians
- List of the verified oldest people
- Oldest people