A year of fire, Notre Dame cathedral in Paris remains closed

The Notre Dame cathedral in Paris was engulfed by flames like today a year ago. One of the world's most prominent places of worship has already been incinerated for most of it, broadcasts ABC. Although a year has passed, the restoration process has not worked out. [...]
The Notre Dame cathedral in Paris was engulfed by flames like today a year ago. One of the world's most prominent places of worship has already been incinerated for most of it, broadcasts ABC.
Although a year has passed, the restoration process has not worked out.
French President Emmanuel Macron almost immediately promised that the cathedral would reopen by 2024. He even added that he would make the cathedral “even more beautiful”. However, the rehabilitation process has been held back from time to time, even before the body's pandemic.
Macron issued a nationwide order for staying at home on March 16th in an effort to prevent the spread of COVID-19. The builders who were part of the reconstruction operation were sent home the next day.
However, the French army general Jean-Louis Georgelin, who is responsible for returning Notre Dame her glory, has not yet lost faith.
A year ago, on April 15, 2019, a fire began in the Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, partially destroying the nearly millennium-old building and its precious art works, visited by millions of people a year.
A large fire swept through the roof of the famous cathedral in downtown Paris, lifting up huge smoke bars in the sky. de












