BFF-38 Notre-Dame’s precious rooster statue found ‘battered’ in debris

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FRANCE-FIRE-NOTRE-DAME-STATUE

Notre-Dame’s precious rooster statue found ‘battered’ in debris

PARIS, April 17, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A wrought copper statue of a rooster
that sat atop Notre-Dame has been found “battered” in the debris of the Paris
cathedral following its devastating fire, France’s culture ministry said.

The statue is considered all the more important because it contains three
holy relics — including a fragment of the Crown of Thorns believed by
Christians to have been worn by Jesus Christ during his crucifixion, placed
there to protect Parisians.

The sculpture of the bird — which is an unofficial symbol of France — was
recovered Tuesday by a restorer picking through the rubble left when the
spire on which it had sat toppled at the height of the inferno that ravaged
Notre-Dame on Monday, a ministry spokesman told AFP.

The head of the French Builders Federation, Jacques Chanut, posted a
picture of the restorer holding a green-coloured rooster statue in the
street.

The ministry spokesman said the statue had been handed over to religious
officials, without elaborating.

A ministry official separately told Le Parisien newspaper that the statue
was “battered but apparently restorable”.

The official was quoted saying that, when the 19th-century spire had
collapsed into the cathedral, the rooster statue had detached “and fallen on
the good side… away from the seat of the fire”.

Because of the statue’s damage, it was not yet possible to verify if the
Crown of Thorns fragment or the other relics were still inside, the official
said.

In a stroke of good timing, sculptures of the Twelve Apostles and four New
Testament evangelists that adorned the cathedral had been lifted off the
building last week, before the fire, for restoration work in the southwestern
city of Perigueux.

Those statues had been fixed to the cathedral in the mid-19th century when
the spire had been built to replace the original 13th-century one that had
been dismantled in the late 18th century because of weather damage.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1705 hrs