The Thrilling Renaissance of Notre Dame

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The Thrilling Renaissance of Notre Dame
Like so many others, my husband and I had waited for hours and minutes on the official Notre Dame website, hoping to capture free tickets to one of the events of the Octave, the first eight days of the reopening of Notre Dame. After dozens of tries, we were suddenly presented with a 9 am reservation on December 11. The event was a Mass being celebrated in honor of significant donors to the restoration, but we did not know that then. All we knew was that we were going to Notre Dame! Notre Dame. Photo: Ellen A The last time we had been inside the splendid cathedral was just a few days before the fire that torched Notre Dame’s roof, collapsed its vaults, and toppled its iconic spire in April of 2019. On that last visit, Notre Dame had seemed as staid and solid as ever, dim and ancient, whispering French history and glory, its dusty grey stone impervious to time. The fire and destruction, along with the unimaginable but very possible collapse of Notre Dame, was a shock to the heart for people around the world, for whom it was a spiritual and cultural nexus. Now, more than five years after the fire, through breathtaking miracles of labor and love, Notre Dame has been reborn. The spire is rebuilt, and topped once more by a golden rooster, a symbol of France, now reconfigured into a golden phoenix of a rooster, risen from the ashes. Notre Dame baptismal font. Photo: Ellen A Upon entering, one encounters first the modern baptismal font, a solid symbol of entry into Christianity and Catholicism after birth or conversion. On the right is a visitors’ desk for information, but you will be forgiven not to notice it, as the glorious nave stretches ahead of you. For what seems like a mile in the distance, tall blond columns of stone, underlit by restored chandeliers, stretch toward the altar. The ceiling’s new vaults arch elegantly to keystones with the image of the Virgin Mary and Christ Child. Inside Notre Dame. Photo: Ellen A
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Lead photo credit : Notre Dame. Photo: Ellen A

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Following a long and fulfilling career as a government attorney in California, Ellen retired to France several years ago with her husband, a novelist. They are enjoying a second life here in Paris with their unruly Cairn terrier, and make frequent visits to Normandy, where they are restoring a small village house.

Comments

  • Eleanor I. Darron
    2024-12-27 12:38:23
    Eleanor I. Darron
    How very fortunate and blessed to be able to enter Notre-Dame again. Your words and descriptions are breathtaking, and it is obviously that you were very emotional to have witnessed the rebirth of Our Lady of Paris. I pray that I will be able to experience the same some day.

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