His
teacher gave him books when his home had none. Twenty years later, he won the
Nobel Prize and wrote him one letter: "You are why I'm here."
November 7, 1913. Mondovi, Algeria. Albert Camus was born into the kind of poverty that erases futures before they
begin. His father, Lucien, was an illiterate agricultural worker in French colonial
Algeria. When World War I broke out, he was conscripted and sent to fight.
On October 11, 1914, Lucien Camus was killed at the Battle of the Marne.
Albert was eleven months old. He would never remember his father's face.
His mother, Catherine, was left alone with two small boys, no money, and almost
no options. She was partially deaf and couldn't read or write. To keep her
children from starving, she took the only work available: cleaning houses for
wealthy French colonials.
Every day, Catherine scrubbed floors for families who had more books in one
room than she'd seen in her entire life. Then she came home to a cramped
two-room apartment in Belcourt—one of Algiers' poorest districts—where she
lived with her sons, her domineering mother, and her partially paralyzed
brother.
No running water. No indoor toilet. No electricity for years. And absolutely no
books. Albert Camus grew up in silence. His mother rarely spoke. There was never
enough food, never enough space, never enough of anything. By every measure that mattered in 1920s colonial Algeria, Albert Camus had no
future.
At ten years old, Albert sat in a crowded classroom at the École Comunale—a
public primary school for working-class children. He was quiet. Watchful. Small for his age. He wore the same worn clothes week
after week. His classmates were mostly the same: poor French and Arab children
whose futures were already factory work, dock work, early death. Education ended at age 14 for children like them. That's when you left school
and started earning money. But one teacher noticed something.

Louis Germain was a slim, serious man who believed that intelligence had
nothing to do with wealth. He'd spent his career teaching poor children, and
he'd learned to spot the ones who could escape if given a chance. Albert Camus was one of them. The boy barely spoke, but when he wrote, his sentences had a clarity that
stunned Germain. Germain made a decision: he would save this boy.
Germain tutored Albert for free after school—hours of extra instruction he
wasn't paid for. He taught him Latin, French literature, mathematics,
everything Albert would need to pass the scholarship exam for lycée—secondary
school.
But the real obstacle wasn't Albert's ability. It was his family. Catherine needed her son to work. At 14, Albert could bring in money. His
grandmother was even more opposed: "Education? For what? He needs to
work." Louis Germain went to their apartment in Belcourt and confronted them. He stood in that tiny, dim apartment—no books, peeling walls, the smell of
poverty thick in the air—and made his case to a nearly deaf woman who couldn't
read and a hostile grandmother who saw education as a betrayal.
"Your son is brilliant," Germain said. "If he continues school,
he can have a different life. Please. Let me help him." Catherine looked at this teacher who had no reason to care about her son. She
couldn't understand why he was fighting so hard. She said yes. In 1924, at age 11, Albert took the scholarship examination for the Grand Lycée
in Algiers. He passed.
He became one of the very few poor children in colonial Algeria to advance to
secondary school. Most of his classmates came from wealthy colonial families.
Albert was the cleaning woman's son. He wore secondhand clothes. He couldn't afford books or lunch. But he studied
with ferocious intensity because he understood: Louis Germain had given him an
escape route, and if he failed, the door would close forever.
Albert didn't fail. He discovered philosophy, literature, theater. He read Gide, Malraux,
Dostoevsky—writers who asked the questions he'd been asking his entire
childhood: What is justice? Why does suffering exist? How do we live in a world
that makes no sense? But he never forgot where he came from. Every day, he went home to Belcourt, to
the silent apartment where his mother still scrubbed floors.
At 17, Camus contracted tuberculosis. It nearly killed him. He survived, but
the illness left him with permanent lung damage and the knowledge that his time
was limited. It changed everything. He became obsessed with the question: If life is short
and ultimately meaningless, how do we live with dignity?
These questions would define his career.
In his twenties, Camus became a journalist, then a novelist. He wrote The
Stranger, about the absurdity of existence. He wrote The Plague, exploring how
humans respond to suffering they can't control. He wrote The Myth of Sisyphus,
arguing that life's meaninglessness doesn't justify despair. Camus became famous worldwide. His books sold millions. Intellectuals debated
his ideas. And in 1957, at age 44, Albert Camus won the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Stockholm, December 10, 1957. Albert Camus stood at the podium, accepting one of the highest honors in
literature. He was the second-youngest person ever to win it. The ceremony was grand royalty in attendance, formal dress, speeches in multiple languages.
But when he left the ceremony, the first thing Camus did was write a letter. Not
to his publisher. Not to literary critics. He wrote to Louis Germain, his
primary school teacher in Belcourt. The letter, dated November 19, 1957,
said: "Dear Monsieur Germain, I let the commotion around me subside a bit
before speaking to you from the bottom of my heart. I have just been given far
too great an honour, one I neither sought nor solicited. But when I heard the
news, my first thought, after my mother, was of you. Without you, without the
affectionate hand you extended to the small poor child that I was, without your
teaching and example, none of all this would have happened. I don't make too
much of this sort of honour. But at least it gives me the opportunity to tell
you what you have been and still are for me, and to assure you that your
efforts, your work, and the generous heart you put into it still live in one of
your little schoolboys who, despite the years, has never stopped being your
grateful pupil. I embrace you with all my heart. -Albert Camus"
Louis Germain, now elderly and retired, received the letter and wept. He'd spent his career teaching poor children who disappeared into factories and
docks. And one of them—one small, silent boy from Belcourt—had just won the
Nobel Prize and credited him as the reason. Albert Camus died three years later, on January 4, 1960, in a car accident
at age 46.
He was at the height of his fame. He had more books to write, more ideas to
explore. But a rainy French road ended everything. In his coat pocket when he
died was an unused train ticket—he'd planned to take the train but accepted a
friend's offer to drive instead. A random choice. A meaningless death in an
absurd universe—exactly the kind of irony Camus had written about his entire
life.
But here's what survived: His books, which have sold tens of millions of copies
and continue to shape how we think about meaning, morality, and rebellion. His ideas about the absurd—that life has no inherent meaning, but we must live
as if it does anyway, with dignity and defiance. And that letter to Louis Germain, which became one of the most famous letters
in literary history.
Louis Germain gave Albert Camus something more valuable than books. He gave him
permission to believe that poverty didn't define potential. That a cleaning
woman's son could think, could write, could matter. That intelligence wasn't a
privilege reserved for the wealthy but existed everywhere—even in silent boys
in crowded classrooms in the poorest districts of colonial Algeria.
Germain died in 1965, five years after Camus. By then, he'd lived long enough
to see his student become immortal. His home had no books. His mother couldn't
read. His future was supposed to be a factory floor. Then one teacher noticed
him—and twenty years later, he won the Nobel Prize.
-Classic Literature