Hungary
Blames France's 'Apocalyptic Loss of Values' for Notre Dame Fire
17
April, 2019
The
iconic Parisian landmark suffered a devastating fire on Monday, with
the blaze destroying two-thirds of the ancient cathedral's roof, its
clock and its 300-foot spire.
Hungarian
Deputy Prime Minister Zsolt Semjen has called the fire which engulfed
the Notre Dame Cathedral a "tragic symbol" of the
"apocalyptic loss of values we are witnessing in the
Western world," AP has reported, citing an excerpt from an
interview set to be broadcast on Hungarian news channel Hir
TV next week.
According
to Semjen, France's "secularist, anti-church policy is also
deeply responsible" for Monday's fire.
"May
God allow this tragedy to be a sign which shakes up the
French nation, not just regarding the reconstruction of the
church but also in terms of their own national
self-esteem, their own history, their own Frenchness and their own
Christianity," the politician, who is also the head of Hungary's
Christian Democratic Party, said.
Semjen
noted that Budapest would consider helping to fund the effort
to rebuild the Notre Dame, but added that France is a "rich
country" and President Emmanuel Macron should have announced
Paris'commitment to rebuilding the iconic cathedral. Macron
described the cathedral fire as a "terrible tragedy"
and vowed to restore
the Notre Dame within five years. example of ancient French
Gothic architecture, went up in flames on Monday evening,
and burned into the early hours of Tuesday morning
as firefighters struggled to douse the flames.
The
cathedral was built between the 12th and 14th centuries, and was
the site of royal marriages, coronations and farewell ceremonies
for prominent French officials over many centuries,
becoming one of the most prominent landmarks of the French
capital.
The
church was undergoing restoration work when Monday's fire broke out.
Authorities are treating the blaze as an accident.
Officials
from Hungary and France have clashed repeatedly on the
issue of European identity and the alleged threat immigration
poses to the continent's 'Christian heritage'. Earlier this
year, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban called President Macron
"the leader of the pro-immigration forces" and vowed
to "fight him."
Hungary
and several other nations in Central and Eastern Europe rejected
the EU's proposed migrant quotas, leading to criticism and
threats of sanctions from Brussels, Paris and Berlin.
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