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  1. 20 de feb. de 2018 · All we do know is that de Gaulle read Weil’s plan to parachute white-uniformed nurses onto battlefields, armed only with the obligation to succor the injured and sacrifice their own lives.

  2. 10 de mar. de 2018 · But Weil was also disparaged (for her plan to parachute white-uniformed nurses onto battlefields) as “crazy” by Charles de Gaulle (Zaretsky 2018). These remarks, however, betray an irony of which Weil was well aware and about which she was deeply concerned near the end of her life, namely, that her person would be considered more ...

  3. 9 de may. de 2021 · In her brilliant and singular book The Need for Roots, written in 1943, the French writer, philosopher and reluctant mystic Simone Weil puts the case starkly: To be rooted is perhaps the most important and least recognised need of the human soul. It is one of the hardest to define.

  4. Su filosofía también la plasmó en la acción, en una vida dedicada al otro, al débil y al necesitado. Hoy nos acercamos al enorme compromiso religioso y político de esta mujer para con quienes sufrían. Todo comenzó un 3 de febrero de 1909 en París. Simone Weil nace en el seno de una familia burguesa y judía.

  5. In today’s article we are going to explore this illustrious life and the philosophy that underpinned it; why Albert Camus described her as “the only great spirit of our times”; T.S. Eliot described her as the greatest saint of the 20th century and why Charles de Gaulle called her insane.

  6. She hoped to convince General Charles de Gaulle, but De Gaulle had misgivings about Weil. De Gaulle once described a plan of Weil’s to parachute nurses into occupied France as ‘mad.’ Last years with the Free French

  7. 25 de may. de 2021 · When Weil died in 1943, she had been working as an analyst for Charles de Gaulle’s Free French movement in London. Her desk job required that she write policy proposals for France upon its...