USA TODAY US Edition

‘Raining fire’ in Notre Dame

Parisians share experience of national nightmare

- Kim Hjelmgaard

PARIS – One had been playing music. Another battled dangerous flames as a medieval spire collapsed. A third scrambled to find keys to a safe that held priceless relics.

Three days after a fire destroyed large parts of the world-famous Notre Dame Cathedral in central Paris, investigat­ors had yet to reveal the specific cause of the blaze that burned the cathedral’s ancient wooden beams. They suspected it was an accident, not foul play.

Dramatic stories of those caught up in the fire at the 850-year-old site emerged.

Johann Vexo, 40, an organist for the church’s choir, was playing his instrument as part of a 6 o’clock Mass service for about 200 people. He was among the first to be evacuated from Notre Dame.

Ten to 15 minutes into the service, a smoke alarm went off. “My first thought was ‘This is a mistake. It’s a problem with the alarm system.’ It never occurred to me that it was a real fire,” Vexo told USA TODAY.

Vexo and the worshipers calmly filed out halfway through a reading of the Gospels. He went home, not even sure if there had been a fire.

Around 6:20, a church security officer responded to the alarm and reported seeing no smoke or fire.

Less than 30 minutes later, as the church was about to let people back in, the security team received a second alert. This time, fire had been spotted.

Myriam Chudzinksi, 27, a corporal in the Paris Fire Brigade, was among the first emergency service personnel to get to the cathedral. She arrived in less than 10 minutes, just before 7 p.m.

“I didn’t realize how intense the fire was going to be,” Chudzinksi said Wednesday during a news conference from the floor of a fire station close to the cathedral.

Chudzinksi saw large crowds of people gathered around the perimeter of

the cathedral taking selfies and shooting video of the unfolding catastroph­e.

“There was so much smoke I didn’t even see the spire fall. I only heard it. It was an extremely loud noise, and I really didn’t understand what it meant,” she said. “The fire was so powerful and escalated so quickly, it seemed like we were constantly having to retreat away from it.”

By 7:30 p.m., more than 400 firefighte­rs were on the scene, along with at least 30 firetrucks and even fire boats that arrived next to the cathedral along the River Seine.

Among the fire crew Monday night was Jean-Marc Fournier, 53, the chaplain of the Paris Fire Brigade, who salvaged precious items during the fire.

“The spire had already fallen. At any time, the nave could have given way,” Fournier said at the same news conference with Chudzinksi.

“There were burning embers all over the floor, in front of the main altar and in the choral area. It actually felt like it was raining fire from the ceiling inside the cathedral. Inside, it was a very strange atmosphere, not a lot of smoke, and it was not excessivel­y hot,” he said.

Fournier, a veteran of the war in Afghanista­n who helped evacuate victims at the Bataclan concert hall in Paris in 2015, was given two tasks that night: Find Notre Dame’s Blessed Sacrament, used during services as the body and blood of Jesus Christ, and the Crown of Thorns, which Catholics believe was worn by Jesus at the Crucifixio­n.

“As I rushed around, I could see someone had already broken open display cases with the fake crown (used in some services and for tourists to look at), probably thinking this was all that needed to be done,” he said.

In fact, Fournier said, both items were held in a safe.

It took some time to find someone who knew where the key was kept.

“When we work together to do good, we get a real sense of pride,” Fournier said, referring to the human chain that was formed to get the historical treasures to safety.

The artifacts were later taken to the Louvre Museum for safekeepin­g.

Thursday, Bishop Patrick Chauvet proposed building a small, temporary church on the plaza outside the monument, so the faithful have a place of worship while the cathedral is closed.

 ?? POOL PHOTO BY MICHEL EULER ?? France pays tribute Thursday to the Paris firefighte­rs who saved Notre Dame Cathedral from collapse and rushed to protect precious religious artifacts when the fire broke out Monday.
POOL PHOTO BY MICHEL EULER France pays tribute Thursday to the Paris firefighte­rs who saved Notre Dame Cathedral from collapse and rushed to protect precious religious artifacts when the fire broke out Monday.
 ?? JOHANN VEXO ?? Organist Johann Vexo says he thought it was a mistake when Notre Dame’s alarm sounded. “It never occurred to me that it was a real fire.”
JOHANN VEXO Organist Johann Vexo says he thought it was a mistake when Notre Dame’s alarm sounded. “It never occurred to me that it was a real fire.”

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