Toronto Star

A hole in the heart of Paris

Notre Dame towers spared as cathedral suffers catastroph­ic damage.

- ADAM NOSSITER AND AURELIEN BREEDEN THE NEW YORK TIMES

PARIS— Notre Dame Cathedral, the symbol of the beauty and history of Paris, was scarred by an extensive fire Monday evening that caused its delicate spire to collapse, bruised the Parisian skies with smoke and further dishearten­ed a city already back on its heels after weeks of violent protests.

The spectacle of flames leaping from the cathedral’s wooden roof — its spire glowing red then turning into a virtual cinder — stunned thousands of onlookers who gathered along the banks of the Seine and packed into the plaza of the nearby Hôtel de Ville, gasping and covering their mouths in horror and wiping away tears.

“It is like losing a member of one’s own family,” said Pierre Guillaume Bonnet, a 45-yearold marketing director. “For me there are so many memories tied up in it.”

Around 500 firefighte­rs battled the blaze for nearly five hours. By 11 p.m. Paris time, the structure had been “saved and preserved as a whole,” the fire chief, Jean-Claude Gallet, said. The two magnificen­t towers soaring above the skyline had been spared, he said, but twothirds of the roof was destroyed.

“The worst has been avoided even though the battle is not completely won,” President Emmanuel Macron said in a brief and solemn speech at Notre-Dame on Monday night, vowing that the cathedral would be rebuilt.

“This is the place where we have lived all of our great moments, the epicentre of our lives,” he said. “It is the cathedral of all the French.”

The cause of the fire was not immediatel­y known, officials said. But it appeared to have begun in the interior network of wooden beams, many dating back to the Middle Ages and nicknamed “the forest,” said the cathedral’s rector, Monsignor Patrick Chauvet.

No one was killed, officials said, but a firefighte­r was seriously injured.

The fire broke out about 6:30 p.m., upending Macron’s plans to deliver an important policy speech about trying to heal the country from months of demonstrat­ions by the yellow vest protest movement that had already defaced major landmarks in the capital and disfigured some of its wealthiest streets.

The tragedy seemed to underscore the challenges heaped before his administra­tion, which has struggled to reconcile the formidable weight of France’s ideals and storied past with the necessity for change to meet the demands of the 21st century.

A jewel of medieval Gothic architectu­re built in the 12th and 13th centuries, Notre Dame is a landmark not only for Paris, where it squats firmly yet gracefully at its very centre, but for all the world. The cathedral is visited by about 30,000 people a day and around 13 million people a year.

For centuries France’s kings and queens were married and buried there. Napoleon was crowned emperor in NotreDame in 1804, and the joyous thanksgivi­ng ceremony after the Liberation of Paris in 1944 took place there, led by Charles de Gaulle.

World leaders congregate­d at the cathedral in a memorial service for de Gaulle in 1970, and then again for president François Mitterrand in 1996.

On Monday evening, as the last rush of tourists were trying to get in for the day, the doors of Notre Dame were abruptly shut without explanatio­n, witnesses said.

Within moments, tiny bits of white smoke started rising from the spire — which, at 295 feet, was the highest part of the cathedral.

Billowing out, the smoke started turning grey, then black, making it clear that a fire was growing inside the cathedral, which is currently covered in scaffoldin­g. Soon, orange flames began punching out of the spire, quickly increasing in intensity.

French police rushed in and started blowing whistles, telling everyone to move back, witnesses said. By then, the flames were towering, spilling out of multiple parts of the cathedral. Tourists and residents alike came to a standstill, pulling out their phones to call their loved ones. Older Parisians began to cry, lamenting how their national treasure was quickly being lost.

Thousands stood on the banks of the Seine river and watched in shock as the fire tore through the cathedral’s wooden roof and brought down the spire. Video filmed by onlookers and shared on social media showed smoke and flames billowing from the top of the cathedral.

Jean-Louis Martin, 56, a native of Dijon in eastern France who works at the university in Geneva, gasped as the flames leapt up. “It hurts me,” he said. “There are no words. It’s just horrible.”

The crowd gasped and cried in horror when the spire fell. “Paris is beheaded,” said Pierre-Eric Trimovilla­s, 32.

The city’s prosecutor’s office said it had opened an investigat­ion.

Chauvet said firefighte­rs were able to save some of the cathedral’s artworks but did not say how much was damaged inside the building. A linen fabric associated with Saint Louis, the Holy Crown of thorns and the cathedral’s treasury were saved.

Gallet, the fire chief, said firefighte­rs were still rescuing artworks in the building, hours after the fire had started. The main risk, he said, was the smoke within the cathedral, and the fall of materials, including melting lead.

The cathedral had been undergoing extensive renovation work. Last week, 16 copper statues representi­ng the Twelve Apostles and four evangelist­s were lifted with a crane so that the spire could be renovated.

The fire came during Holy Week, six days before Easter Sunday. For Roman Catholics, the cathedral has been a spiritual pilgrimage site for generation­s. France has a deep Catholic history, and nearly twothirds of its population is Catholic, even though fewer and fewer attend Mass.

The risk of the fire is not just to the cathedral itself, but also to the gargoyles that cover its walls and to the stained glass, particular­ly its “rose” windows.

The largest of its bells, which dates to 1681, managed to survive the French Revolution and has been rung at some of the most important events in French history, including both world wars.

Yet the fire is likely to be just the latest, if most dramatic, insult to a landmark that has endured decades of neglect and damage, some at the hands of French revolution­aries, through its more than 850-year history.

 ?? GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? The steeple collapses Monday at Notre Dame Cathedral as fire engulfs the Parisian landmark. Constructi­on on the cathedral began in the 12th century.
GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES The steeple collapses Monday at Notre Dame Cathedral as fire engulfs the Parisian landmark. Constructi­on on the cathedral began in the 12th century.
 ?? DIANA AYANNA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Flames and smoke billow as the spire on Notre Dame Cathedral collapses on Monday.
DIANA AYANNA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flames and smoke billow as the spire on Notre Dame Cathedral collapses on Monday.
 ?? ERIC FEFERBERG AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Above left, people kneel in prayer Monday as flames engulf the cathedral. The fire appeared to have begun in its network of wooden beams, the cathedral’s rector said
ERIC FEFERBERG AFP/GETTY IMAGES Above left, people kneel in prayer Monday as flames engulf the cathedral. The fire appeared to have begun in its network of wooden beams, the cathedral’s rector said
 ?? HUBERT HITIER AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
HUBERT HITIER AFP/GETTY IMAGES
 ?? PHILIPPE WOJAZER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Smoke is seen in the interior after the fire.
PHILIPPE WOJAZER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Smoke is seen in the interior after the fire.
 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada