Tourists queued in a line that stretched across the Seine, waiting to enter the renovated Gothic landmark. Inside, ushers struggled to gently enforce a separation between curious visitors and the faithful.
Notre Dame’s rector, Rev. Olivier Ribadeau Dumas, said this week’s crowda exceeded expectations.
" Before the fire, we saw about 20,000 pilgrims a day," he said. "Now it's closer to 30,000. The joy people feel rediscovering the cathedral — you can see it on their faces as they leave."
Among the worshippers was Marylène Portet, 63, a Paris native who has attended Easter Mass at Notre Dame since childhood. She frowned as a group of tourists pulled out their phone to snap photos from areas where the faithful were gathered.
“This is a sacred moment,” she said. “You don’t just take a picture of the relic and move on.”
After the ushers intervened, Portet went back to soaking up the moment, gazing at the renewed ceiling or leaning forward to catch a glimpse of the ceremony unfolding more than 200 rows ahead.
“It’s not only the cathedral that’s been rebuilt,” she said. “It feels like a link that was missing for so long has been restored too.”
Tiphaine Mauquiez, 41, came with her two young daughters from Poitiers in central France.
“We tried to attend Mass during reopening week in December but couldn’t get in,” she said. “This time we made it. For my daughters to witness this magnificent moment — it’s unbelievable.”
In January, cathedral officials announced a record attendance in the first month following the reopening.
“Before the fire, we welcomed between 10 and 12 million visitors a year,” said Sibylle Bellamy-Brown, head of public reception at Notre Dame. “Since the reopening, more than 3.5 million have already come. But our goal isn’t to set records. What matters is seeing the cathedral come back to life.”
For French and foreign worshippers alike, the day of celebration wasn’t just about faith, but reconnection.
Marianna Janik, 34, visiting from Poland with her husband, said they planned their trip around this moment.
“We simply could not miss this,” she said, before kneeling as the relic procession passed. “We came to Mass here 10 years ago. When the fire happened, we were heartbroken. So coming back now to worship Jesus Christ in a cathedral that rose from the ashes — it’s even more powerful.”
On April 15, 2019, a devastating fire forced the closure of the monument. After a five-year renovation that's still ongoing, Notre Dame reopened in Dec. 2024 in a grand ceremony that drew leaders from around the world.
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
Credit: AP