USA TODAY US Edition

Cathedral empty for Christmas services

Notre Dame may never recover from April fire

- John Bacon

France’s Notre Dame Cathedral, which failed to host Christmas services Wednesday for the first time in more than 200 years, may never recover from the devastatin­g fire that collapsed the roof and an iconic spire, its rector said.

Monsignor Patrick Chauvet said the church, which dates back more than 800 years, has been left so fragile that there is a 50% chance it can’t be saved. The actual restoratio­n probably won’t even begin this year because of conservati­on work aimed at rescuing the structure, he said.

“Today it is not out of danger,” he said before Christmas Eve midnight Mass at a nearby church. “It will be out of danger when we take out the remaining scaffoldin­g.”

The massive cathedral was dark and empty on Christmas. Services were held a mile away at Saint-Germain l’Auxerrois, a church with its own renowned history dating back to the 7th century.

A wooden liturgical platform was constructe­d in Saint-Germain to resemble Notre Dame’s, and the cathedral’s choir sang at midnight Mass.

On April 15, millions of people around the world watched in stunned horror, glued to TVs, as flames and smoke spewed from the Gothic marvel. The fire burned for hours, virtually unabated despite the efforts of hundreds of firefighte­rs.

Within days, more than $1 billion was pledged by thousands of donors to finance the reconstruc­tion. It will be needed.

Tens of thousands of scaffoldin­g tubes had lined the church when the fire broke out. Some were damaged, and workers have been gingerly extricatin­g the damaged scaffoldin­g while trying not to weaken the structure.

“We need to remove completely the scaffoldin­g in order to make the building safe,” Chauvet said. “Once the scaffoldin­g is removed we need to assess the state of the cathedral, the quantity of stones to be removed and replaced.”

Progress has been slowed by environmen­tal concerns. In August, Paris authoritie­s shut down streets around the cathedral to decontamin­ate them after high levels of lead were discovered in the area.

The cathedral did hold a modest service in June in its Chapel of the Virgin, marking 850 years since the consecrati­on of the cathedral’s altar. The 30 gathered congregant­s wore hard hats under a ceiling with gaping holes.

Chauvet said he believes that if the structure survives, it could be safe for tourists in 2024. But he expects full renovation to take much longer.

French President Emmanuel Macron set a goal of 2024 for completion of the reconstruc­tion, although experts have expressed doubt the timetable is feasible.

“We are a people of builders,” Macron said in announcing the reconstruc­tion effort. “So yes, we will rebuild the Notre Dame Cathedral. Even more beautifull­y.”

 ?? THIERRY MALLET/AP ?? Flames and smoke rise from the blaze as the spire starts to topple on Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris on April 15.
THIERRY MALLET/AP Flames and smoke rise from the blaze as the spire starts to topple on Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris on April 15.

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