Élie Allégret | |
Birth Date: | 1865 1, df=y |
Birth Place: | Lyon, France |
Death Place: | Paris, France |
Occupation: | Pastor, missionary |
Organization: | Société des evangelical missions |
Children: | 6, including Marc and Yves |
Élie Allégret (8 January 1865 – 28 October 1940) was a French Protestant pastor and missionary in Africa.
Élie Allégret studied at the Protestant Faculty of Theology in Paris.
In 1885, he was invited by Juliette Rondeaux, widow of University of Paris law professor Paul Gide (1832–1880) and mother of writer André Gide, to the château de La Roque-Baignard to work as the private tutor of André and direct both his reading and his religious education.
In 1889, he became a pastor and was sent on a mission to Gabon, to the mission station of .
In 1914, at the outbreak of World War I, Allégret, who had become a military chaplain, went on a mission to Cameroon before becoming co-director of the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society.
After the end of World War I, Allégret left on a mission around the world. Between July 1926 and February 1928, he traveled through Oceania.[1]
En 1891, Élie Allégret married Suzanne Ehrhardt (1869–1950). They had six children: Jean-Paul (1894–1930), Éric (1896–1971), André, Marc (1900–1973), Yves (1905–1987) and Valentine (1909–1988). Jean-Paul and André were born in Talagouga, in Africa. Éric was born in Paris when Élie was working at the headquarters of the Paris Evangelical Missionary Society in Paris. Filmmaker Marc Allégret was born in Basel, Switzerland, followed by Yves Allégret, also a filmmaker, in Paris where the family had settled in 1903.
Élie Allégret is the biological grandfather of Catherine Allégret.
Suzanne Ehrhardt had a sister, Valentine Ehrhardt (1873–1906), who also participated in evangelical missions.[2]
Allégret was the tutor and friend of the writer André Gide. The two met in 1885, and quickly developed a deep friendship.
In 1889, Allégret wrote whilst aboard the ship Portugal, en route to Gabon. A significant correspondence maintained their bond of friendship, especially during Allégret's long stays in Africa.
In 1914, after Élie Allégret departed for a mission of evangelization in Cameroon, Suzanne Allégret established her own correspondence with André Gide. Suzanne, matriarch of the family with six children, would recount in detail the activities of each, at the request of Gide.