Notre-Dame Cathedral Reopens in Paris
Facts
- Notre-Dame Cathedral, the 12th-century Gothic church in the heart of Paris, reopened over the weekend for the first time since a massive fire destroyed its roof and spire in 2019.[1][2]
- Some 1.5K people attended the reopening ceremony on Saturday, including world leaders such as France's Pres. Emmanuel Macron, Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskyy and US Pres.-elect Donald Trump.[3][4]
- Earlier, Macron hosted Trump and Zelenskyy at the Élysée Palace for a private meeting that the Ukrainian described as "good and productive." Trump also met with UK's Prince William after the ceremony.[5][6]
- On Sunday morning, Paris Archbishop Laurent Ulrich led an inaugural mass to consecrate the altar. Later that day, a second service — and the first regular public Mass — was celebrated with 2.5K worshippers in attendance.[7][8]
- Special services will continue this week, including the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Thursday and the solemn return of the Holy Crown of Thorns on Friday. Notre-Dame will resume its daily schedule next Monday, with church authorities expecting to receive up to 15M visitors a year.[7][9]
- The reopening of Notre-Dame culminates a five-year reconstruction effort that cost nearly $1B and involved thousands of experts, from carpenters and stonemasons to stained glass window artists. The cause of the fire has yet to be determined.[2][3][4]
Sources: [1]National Review, [2]Associated Press, [3]National Catholic Register, [4]Reuters, [5]CNN, [6]BBC News, [7]France 24, [8]The New York Times and [9]Notre Dame de Paris.
Narratives
- Narrative A, as provided by Euronews. Under fire at home, Macron has achieved a symbolic victory with the reopening of the Notre-Dame Cathedral — which he has described as a "metaphor for the life of the nation" — in just five years. Furthermore, he was able to make an impressive return to the world stage to broker talks with Trump and Zelenskyy.
- Narrative B, as provided by UnHerd. Given that Notre-Dame is a symbol of Western civilization, those who worked to rebuild it must be praised — even politicians such as Emmanuel Macron. It's a shame, though, that the French president has sought to use the reopening for his own secular purposes, acting as if the cathedral were a civil hall rather than a place of worship.