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Sydney archbishop sends message of support to France

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Flames and smoke billow from the Notre Dame Cathedral after a fire broke out in Paris April 15, 2019. Photo: CNS photo/Benoit Tessier, Reuters
Flames and smoke billow from the Notre Dame Cathedral after a fire broke out in Paris April 15, 2019. Photo: CNS photo/Benoit Tessier, Reuters

By The Catholic Weekly and CNS

Archbishop of Sydney Anthony Fisher OP has written to the Archbishop of Paris Michel Aupetit, conveying his prayers and sympathy for French Catholics following the Notre Dame Cathedral fire.

Prayers were offered at a number of Masses at St Mary’s Cathedral the day after the fire broke out, with a single bell tolled after the 5.30pm Mass.

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“Here in Sydney we know about the grief experienced by our brothers and sisters in France as we have twice lost our own cathedral to fire,” Archbishop Fisher said, adding that he visited and prayed in the iconic cathedral on many occasions.

“[Notre Dame Cathedral] stands as a symbol of our Christian faith and civilisation. In this moment of sorrow, the Church of Sydney and Australia unites with the Church in France in grief.

Sydney archbishop Anthony Fisher
Archbishop Anthony Fisher OP says Sydney has experienced the trauma of the loss of a cathedral by fire. PHOTO: G Portelli

“We are all praying for our French brothers and sisters in Christ with this new heavy cross to bear.”

St Mary’s Cathedral dean Father Don Richardson also reached out to the Notre Dame Cathedral dean Monsignor Patrick Chauvet, conveying his prayers and sympathy to Catholics in Paris.

Related article: 8 facts about Notre Dame Cathedral

A major blaze engulfed Notre Dame Cathedral on April 15, sending pillars of flame and billowing smoke over the centre of the French capital.

The fire erupted about 6.30pm local time after the building was closed to visitors. Authorities said the cause was not certain, but that it could be linked to renovation work that the cathedral was undergoing, the BBC reported.

Officials ordered an evacuation of the area around the 850-year-old cathedral that has withstood world wars and political turmoil throughout France’s history.

Le Monde, a Paris daily newspaper, reported that the fire erupted in the attic of the cathedral. Televised images showed the church’s iconic steeple was ablaze.

In 2018, the Catholic Church in the Archdiocese of Paris opened an urgent fundraising appeal to save the cathedral, which was starting to crumble.

The Associated Press reported that Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said about an hour after the fire started that firefighters were attempting to contain a “terrible fire” at the cathedral. An AP reporter at the scene said the roof at the back behind the cathedral, behind the nave, was in flames and yellow-brown smoke and ash filled the sky.

City officials cordoned off the area around the Gothic-style church and urged people to evacuate the immediate surroundings.

As the sun set over Paris, the fire consumed the upper portion of the cathedral and the main steeple was filled with flames. It eventually collapsed into the church.

“Everything is burning. The framing, which dates from the 19th century on one side and the 13th on the other, there will be nothing left,” Andre Finot, a spokesman for the cathedral, told Agence France-Presse.

At one point, emergency responders entered the cathedral in an attempt to preserve priceless art and statues from destruction.

Flames and smoke billow from the Notre Dame Cathedral after a fire broke out in Paris April 15, 2019. Photo: CNS photo/Benoit Tessier, Reuters
Flames and smoke billow from the Notre Dame Cathedral after a fire broke out in Paris April 15, 2019. Photo: CNS photo/Benoit Tessier, Reuters

The blaze elicited emotional responses from throughout France as Christians began the observance of Holy Week.

“I had a scream of horror. I was ordained in this cathedral,” Bishop Eric Moulin-Beaufort of Reims, president of the French bishops’ conference, said in reaction to the disaster.

“For a Parisian, our lady is a kind of obvious,” he said. “I’ve been here this afternoon. This tragedy reminds us that nothing on this earth is made to last forever. I think a lot about the Diocese of Paris. The Chrism mass will not be celebrated. It is a part of our flesh that is damaged. But I hope this will create a new momentum, a universal movement.”

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted, “Our Lady of Paris in flames. It is emotional for a whole nation. Thoughts for all Catholics and for all French. Like all our countrymen, I’m sad tonight to see this part of us burn.”

The magnitude of the fire resonated with church leaders as well as those involved in preserving culturally important sites around the world.

The Vatican issued a statement in the evening saying that it learned “with shock and sadness the news of the terrible fire that has devastated the Cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris, symbol of Christianity, in France and in the world.”

“We express our closeness to the French Catholic and to the people of Paris. We pray for the firefighters and for all those who are doing everything possible to face this dramatic situation,” the statement said.

“The horrific fire that is engulfing the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris is shocking and saddens us all, for this particular cathedral is not only a majestic church, it is also a world treasure,” said Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.

“Noble in architecture and art, it has long been a symbol of the transcendent human spirit as well as our longing for God,” the cardinal said in a statement April 15. “Our hearts go out to the archbishop and the people of Paris, and we pray for all the people of France, entrusting all to the prayers and intercession of the Mother of God, especially the firefighters battling the fire.

“We are a people of hope and of the resurrection, and as devastating as this fire is, I know that the faith and love embodied by this magnificent cathedral will grow stronger in the hearts of all Christians,” he added.

Flames and smoke billow from the Notre Dame Cathedral after a fire broke out in Paris April 15, 2019. Photo: CNS photo/Charles Platiau, Reuters
Flames and smoke billow from the Notre Dame Cathedral after a fire broke out in Paris April 15, 2019. Photo: CNS photo/Charles Platiau, Reuters

Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, said in a statement from the archdiocese that he immediately went to St Patrick Cathedral next to his office in midtown Manhattan and asked through “the intercession of Notre Dame, our Lady, for the cathedral at the heart of Paris, and of civilisation, now in flames!”

“God preserve this splendid house of prayer, and protect those battling the blaze,” he said he prayed.

Audrey Azoulay, director general of UNESCO, the United Nation’s cultural agency, said in a tweet that her office “stood at France’s side to save and restore” the cathedral, which was added the organization’s world heritage list in 1991.

She described the cathedral as “a priceless heritage” and that the agency was monitoring the effort to fight the blaze.

In addition, the Diocese of Rome tweeted, “We are close to our brothers and sisters of the Church of #France, to the ecclesial community and to all Parisians. United, let us pray to the Virgin Mary, revered to #NotreDame, as mother of hope and all consolations.”

US President Donald Trump also expressed concern for the cathedral in a tweet, writing, “So horrible to watch the massive fire at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris.” He even offered a suggestion on how first responders could tackle it: “Perhaps flying water tankers could be used to put it out. Must act quickly!”

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