Join Books.org — it's free

Political Activism & Participation, Labor Leaders, Activists, & Social Reformers, Women's Biography, Christian Biography, Women's Biography
Madeleine Delbrel: A Life Beyond Boundaries by Charles F. Mann β€” book cover

Madeleine Delbrel: A Life Beyond Boundaries

by Charles F. Mann
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Synopsis

Who? Madeleine Delbrel (1904-1964), an unconventional Frenchwoman, grew from precocious child to bohemian adolescent and from confirmed atheist to Catholic convert. A woman of great compassion and awareness, she was vigorously involved in the major social, political, cultural, and religious movements of 20th-century France. After her conversion, she founded an experimental community of professional women who lived and worked among the French Communists in the Paris suburb of Ivry-sur-Seine. A true humanitarian with a contemplative spirit, she came to love God intimately in the streets, cafes, subways, and people of Paris. Today Madeleine Delbrel is revered in Europe as both a social activist and a "secular mystic." Her "Cause for Beatification," the first step to sainthood, is currently under study in Rome.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In his first book, a cheery account of the life of a seemingly benign Catholic activist currently under consideration for sainthood, Mann never makes clear what was special about her. Delbrl did some unusual things in her life, but almost everything is presented in exactly the same breezy style, making it hard to know what is supposed to be significant. When Delbrl was 19, her father, whom she adored, went blind because of diabetes (misdiagnosed as venereal disease, according to Mann) and began abusing his wife verbally and physically. At more or less the same time, Delbrl's fianc dumped her to become a priest and Delbrl (who is described here simply as ``crushed'' by these events) was forcibly committed to a psychiatric hospital. Although as a young woman she was highly critical of religion, Delbrl later found God, apparently through her friendship with ``a party of high-spirited people'' whose acquaintance she made at a dance hall. Eventually she and two friends took up the offer of a pastor to live for free in a house in the Paris suburb Ivry-sur-Seine (which turned out to be a hotbed of Marxism) in exchange for their promise to ``live there and simply be present among the poor and working class neighbors,'' and Delbrl eventually became known for her writing and speeches. Despite the occasional aside about her love of Charlie Chaplin movies and her cutesy gifts to friends, Delbrl remains a cipher here, and Mann's admiring discussion of his subject's patient tolerance of communism (she often gave talks titled ``The Communists, My Friends'') wears thin. (Jan.)

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1998
Publisher
New World Pr
Pages
232
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780964560062

Similar books