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Radio France Internationale
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Bells of Notre-Dame cathedral ring out for first time since 2019 fire

This photograph shows three new bells, including the bell used during the Paris Olympic Games, set to be placed into Paris' Notre-Dame cathedral on November 7, 2024, one month before it is due to reopen and five years after a devastating fire. © Thomas Samson, AFP

Paris (AFP) – The bells of Notre-Dame tolled on Friday for the first time since Paris's beloved cathedral was ravaged by flames in 2019. The famous monument is set to reopen its doors to the public on 8 December.

The bells of Notre-Dame in Paris rang out together on Friday for the first time since a 2019 fire that devastated the historic cathedral, AFP reporters said.

The sound of the eight bells in Notre-Dame's northern belfry came a month before the cathedral is to reopen following five years of painstaking restoration work in the wake of the blaze.

"This is a beautiful, important and symbolic step," said Philippe Jost, who runs the public body tasked with restoring the cathedral under challenging circumstances.

Horror blaze

On the evening of 19 April, 2019, Parisians and the world watched in horror as flames ravaged the world heritage landmark and then toppled its spire.

President Emmanuel Macron quickly set the ambitious goal to rebuild Notre-Dame within five years and make it "even more beautiful" than before.

Some 250 companies and hundreds of experts were mobilised for a restoration costing hundreds of millions of euros.

Shortly before 10:30am on Friday, the bells sounded one by one until all eight chimed in harmony for about five minutes.

"It's not perfect yet, but we will make it perfect," said Alexandre Gougeon, who is in charge of the re-installation of the bells.

"This first test was a success," he told AFP.

Each bell had already been soundchecked individually on Thursday.

France mulls charging tourists to enter Notre-Dame cathedral

High emotions

"We all felt an intense emotion," said the cathedral's vice rector, Guillaume Normand, after hearing the bells chiming.

"It's November 8 and Notre-Dame is telling us: 'I'm here, waiting for you'," he said, calling the sounds "a signal of joy".

The 2019 fire destroyed part of the northern belfry, requiring it to be restored and the bells to be removed, cleaned of dust and lead, and then returned to their space.

The heaviest bell, called "Gabriel", weighs over four tonnes, and the lightest, "Jean-Marie", 800 kilogrammes.

A weekend of ceremonies is to mark Notre-Dame's reopening on 7 and 8 December.

No detailed programme for the event has been published, but Jost told the RTL broadcaster Friday that there would be "great artists of international standing, which is what the cathedral deserves".

Unconfirmed reports have suggested that former Beatles member Paul McCartney – who is scheduled to perform concerts in Paris on 4 and 5 December – could be part of the Notre-Dame reopening lineup.

Notre-Dame is expected to welcome 14 to 15 million visitors annually after reopening, compared to 12 million in 2017 before the fire.

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