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Simone Weil

Simone Weil. (1909 -1943). Born February 3rd, 1909. Father is Dr. Bernard Weil mother is Selma Weil. Both were Jewish but they did not practice there religion. She had an older brother named Andre who was a distinguished mathematician.

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Simone Weil

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  1. Simone Weil (1909 -1943) Born February 3rd, 1909. Father is Dr. Bernard Weil mother is Selma Weil. Both were Jewish but they did not practice there religion. She had an older brother named Andre who was a distinguished mathematician.

  2. -Ill frequently as a child yet despite her ailments she excelled at her studies. -Attended high school at Lycee Henri IV and later went and studied at Ecole Superieure in 1928. -She dressed in unattractive attire. She abstained from sex and found desire to be unappealing. She earned the nick name the red virgin. -1931 hard work and dedication pays off and she accepts a teaching position at Lycee Le Puy. All was well for the time being.

  3. -While at Le Puy she became involved in local politics. Namely the struggle of the working class. She participated in demonstrations and marches and wrote articles for trade union journals. -She was transferred to three different schools due to her unacceptable involvement with the working class protestors. -Over this period she wrote “Oppression and Liberty” in which expressed her opinions about capitalist and democratic societies. -She did not associate with her teacher colleagues but preferred the company of workers and sat with them in cafés. Her salary she shared with the unemployed.

  4. -1934, Takes a two year leave from teaching to work in a factory in order to better understand the hardships of the working class. -Worked with stamping press and milling machine but due to poor health and her lack of physical strength she had to give it up.

  5. -In 1936 she went to Spain to join the anarchist militia during the Spanish Civil War. Although she did not actually fight even though she was issued a rifle Simone helped by cooking food for the soldiers at the front lines. Fortunately, she stepped into a pot of boiling oil and was removed from the battlefield before her unit was massacred.

  6. -After being injured Simone returned to France in poor health. She revealed in her journals her deepening disillusionment with ideologies after witnessing the horrors of war in Spain. She began thinking much about religion and God's plans for her life. -Simone experienced her first mystical experience at the Benedictine abbey of Solesmes. While listening to a Gregorian chant she had a terrible migraine and when it was at its worst she suddenly experienced the joy and bitterness of Christ's passion. -1938-1942, During this time she composed the main components of her book "Waiting for God" which was a compilation of essays, journal entries and letters.

  7. -Weil was never baptized. She felt she could be “faithful to Christ” without being a member of the Church; perhaps even more so because she was outside it. “A few sheep should remain outside the fold to bear witness that the love of Christ is essentially something different.” -Gravity and Grace

  8. - “May all this [sensitivity, intelligence, love] be stripped away from me, devoured by God, transformed into Christ’s substance and given for food to the afflicted men whose body and soul lack every kind of nourishment. And let me be paralytic—blind, deaf, witless and utterly decrepit… . Father, since thou art the Good and I am mediocrity, rend this body and soul away from me and make them into things for your use, and let nothing remain of me, forever, except this rending itself, or else nothingness.” -She confessed in a letter, "every time I think of the crucifixion of Christ I commit the sin of envy.

  9. -In 1942 she and her family moved to the United States in order to flee the conquering German Nazi Forces. During the time before her family’s departure Simone had tried to teach again but wasn't allowed to because of her Jewish background. -She felt much guilt for her suffering brethren in France so didn’t stay long in the U.S. She moved to London to join the free French movement as a writer. During this time she wrote her book "The Need for Roots".

  10. The Need for Roots (1953). “The great problem of society is its 'uprootedness'; its cure is a social order grounded in a 'spiritual core' of physical labor. From work one can find beauty, poetry and spiritual inspiration.” She wrote it in 1943 at the request of the Free French organization as a guide to the reconstruction of postwar France.

  11. -Simone Adolphine Weil died on August 24th 1943 after being diagnosed with tuberculosis. Not helping her illness was the fact that she limited her food intake to match that of the French official ration that was allowed. -She was a mere 34 years of age.

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