The Old Town


Norte Dame de la Garde.

NDLG in on the hill to the South of the city and is one of the basilicas built during the 18th century along with, for example, a similar monstrosity overlooking the otherwise beautiful city of Lyon. The structure sets out to be imposing with a huge statue of Mary carrying the baby Jesus on top of the church. The diameter of the arm of the baby is 1.1metres, so you can judge the size of the rest. The church is horrendously over decorated with gold, sparkles, stained glass and statues richly covered in every spare space in the building, and that is bad enough.

What is worse it that every spare flat space, including most of the outside walls around the edge of the property, is covered by little marble plaques with messages of thanks to NDLG for some or other miracle.
The official claims of the church, set out carved in marble for all to see, include the protection of Marseille from destruction during the second world war (see above, apparently the protection does not extend to the poor areas), and the eventual liberation of the town. One of the personal messages was a thank you for winning the Tour de France and for assistance with the struggle against drugs in the following months. I wonder how NDLG chose who to support, why she supported a drug cheat and why she did not support anyone the following year.

These concerns are all trite, but we did visit around 11.45 while the Sunday mass was underway in the Crypt. We noted that there was a café upstairs, and so made our way up for a bracing coffee prior to the walk down the hill. We found ourselves in a restaurant, with sufficient seats for 50 to 70 people, all reserved. We watched the congregation wend its way up to the restaurant and take their places, to be served by several young women in what looked like representative dress, if not national dress, from a range of poor, third world countries. They were polite, respectful and hard working (the young women, not the congregation)– meeting the needs of the good (catholic) burghers of the parish of NDLG. A conversation with one of the young women, in perfect French, confirmed my suspicions. The best and brightest young women of Africa and Asia had devoted their youth to becoming novices of the order of nuns who had their headquarters at NDLG. Their vocation was to feed the hungry masses, after mass, with the plat du jour.
France, the eldest sister of the church, is sometimes the ugly sister.


