Notre Dame's reopening will have solemn rituals, grand opera, heads of
state and high security
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[December 03, 2024]
By JOHN LEICESTER
PARIS (AP) — The reopening of Notre Dame this coming weekend is going to
be a high-security affair, with a repeat of some measures used during
the Paris Olympics and the sealing-off to tourists of the cathedral's
island location in the heart of the French capital.
After more than five years of reconstruction following the fire that
devastated Notre Dame in 2019, invite-only ceremonies Saturday and
Sunday will usher in its rebirth.
Police chief Laurent Nuñez said only people with invitations and the
island's residents will have access to the Ile de la Cité in the middle
of the River Seine, which includes Notre Dame and habitually hums with
tourists.
He said about 50 heads of state and government are expected and that
security arrangements are drawing on the police measures that sealed off
large sections of central Paris for the Paris Games' flamboyant opening
ceremony.
“A very high level of security will be applied," Nuñez said in an
interview published Monday in Le Parisien.
President-elect Donald Trump said late Monday that he would be attending
the reopening celebration. The 2019 fire occurred during Trump's first
term as U.S. president.
Archbishop to bang on the doors
The first celebrations starting Saturday afternoon will blend religious
ritual and showbiz. Paris Archbishop Laurent Ulrich will preside at a
reopening service, banging on Notre Dame's shuttered doors with his
staff to reopen them, the cathedral website says.
The archbishop will also symbolically reawaken Notre Dame's thunderous
grand organ. The fire that melted the cathedral's lead roofing coated
the huge instrument in toxic dust. Its 8,000 pipes, ranging in size from
that of a pen to over 10 meters (33 feet) tall, have been painstakingly
disassembled, cleaned, and retuned.
There will also be psalms, prayers and singing. French President
Emmanuel Macron will attend and address the VIP guests.
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The nave of Notre-Dame de Paris cathedral is seen while French
President Emmanuel Macron visits the restored interiors of the
cathedral, Friday Nov. 29, 2024, in Paris. (Stephane de Sakutin,
Pool via AP)
A musical show
After the service, opera singers Pretty Yende, from South Africa,
and Julie Fuchs, from France; Chinese pianist Lang Lang; cellist
Yo-Yo Ma; Benin-born singer Angelique Kidjo; Lebanese singer Hiba
Tawaji and others will perform at a concert Saturday evening for the
cathedral and those who took part in the reconstruction, says the
show's broadcaster, France Télévisions.
The security cordon sealing off the whole of the Ile de La Cité,
plus a stretch of the Seine's southern bank and nine of its bridges,
will be in place from early Saturday evening to Sunday night, the
police chief said. Only those involved in the ceremonies and
residents will be granted access, he said. All shops on the island —
many are geared to the tourist trade — as well as boat tours that
start and stop there will be closed for the weekend, he added.
Sunday Mass and buffet
The Paris archbishop will also lead an inaugural Mass and
consecration of the new altar on Sunday morning.
Nearly 170 bishops from France and other countries will join the
celebration, as well as priests from all 106 parishes in the Paris
diocese, the cathedral website says.
It says Mass will be followed by a “fraternal buffet” for the needy.
Public viewing areas capable of holding 40,000 people will be set up
on the Seine’s southern bank, so spectators can follow the two days
of events on screens, the police chief said.
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