Anne-Dauphine Julliand

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Anne-Dauphine Julliand (born 23 November 1973) is a French woman writer. Her two published works are Deux petits pas sur le sable mouillé [fr] (Two Small Footprints in Wet Sand: A Mother's Memoir) in 2011 and Une journée particulière in 2013, essays recounting her family life experience with the serious illness of two of her children. She then made the documentary film Everyday Heroes [fr] (Et les mistrals gagnants), released in 2017.

Julliand was born in Paris. She studied journalism, then wrote, first in the daily press.[1][2]

In July 2000, she married[3] and had four children: Gaspard, Thaïs, Azylis and Arthur.[4]

In 2006, her daughter Thaïs, born 29 February 2004[5] is diagnosed as a bearer of a metachromatic leukodystrophy, a rare form of lysosomal storage disease, and therefore has a very short life expectancy. In 2007, Thais died of her disease, while her younger sister Azylis was also found to be a bearer of leukodystrophy.[6] Thanks to a hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, the disease progresses more slowly in her than in Thaïs.[4] Azylis finally dies on 20 February 2017.[7]

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