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Photo: AP/Jeff Dean.
Gargoyles at the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption in Covington, Kentucky.

What I love about gargoyles is that they sort of give permission to fantasy.

When we say that something isn’t carved in stone, we mean it isn’t necessarily going to be part of our lives, not even real for very long. But with gargoyles, people’s worst imaginary fears are in fact carved in stone. A recognition that things unseen may be very real to us.

Peter Smith at AP writes that a cathedral in Kentucky has been brushing up its gargoyles.

“Gargoyles have watched over this small Kentucky city for more than a century from their lofty perches on a cathedral known as ‘America’s Notre Dame.’ A new renovation will ensure they keep their posts for years to come on the meticulously restored facade of the towering stone sanctuary.

“Workers in recent weeks have been installing new terra cotta gargoyles as one of the final steps of a major, two-year restoration of the Cathedral Basilica of the Assumption. The Catholic cathedral’s nickname stems from how its exterior was modeled on the larger Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris — from the pointed arches and flying buttresses to the gargoyles and chimeras with their reptilian grins and piercing, canine eyes. …

“The Covington cathedral needed a rehab due to the slow deterioration of old stone, metal and terra cotta after 125 years of exposure to the elements in its Ohio River city across from Cincinnati.

“ ‘We consider ourselves blessed to be able to ensure the cathedral is taken care of for coming generations,’ said Assumption’s rector, the Very Rev. Ryan Maher.

“Workers have been painstakingly repairing and replacing tons of Indiana limestone. The new gargoyles are replicas based on meticulous scans of the 32 worn originals. … The finishing touch will be the installation of new 26 chimeras along the rooftop. These grotesque creatures, similar to gargoyles, are exact replicas of their weathered predecessors. …

“Workers have faced numerous challenges throughout the project: hoisting and fitting heavy stones into the façade while operating cranes above a busy street in the heat, cold and wind. They have been patching and fixing what they can and replacing other parts entirely.

“ ‘It’s an art and a science that’s passed down from generation to generation’ [said Brian Walter, executive vice president of Trisco Systems, the prime contractor for the restoration]. ‘Every part of it is challenging.’ …

“Over the generations, the cathedral has had several renovations and overhauls, with exterior statues added in 2019. But Maher knew a comprehensive exterior renovation was needed when, in 2018, he found a large, fallen piece of stone — evidence of a wider deterioration. This time, workers used more durable stainless steel pins and brackets to secure the stone and replace the original carbon steel, which had rusted.

“The cathedral opened in 1901, following a multiyear construction campaign by the Belgian-born Bishop Camillus Paul Maes, head of the Diocese of Covington and an adm”irer of the French Gothic style. …

“The ambition was striking, cathedral historian Stephen Enzweiler said. The city then had just over 40,000 people, similar to its population today. ‘At the time, no one had ever heard of Covington,’ Enzweiler said.

“Maes wanted a sanctuary large enough to accommodate the rapidly growing immigrant Catholic population. … The cathedral was part of a larger Gothic revival happening around the turn of the century that also saw the emergence of such landmark cathedrals as St. Patrick’s and St. John the Divine in New York.

“ ‘This is a smaller version of that revival of French Gothic in America, done at a very high level in a little town at the time, of surprisingly high quality,’ said Duncan Stroik, an architect, professor of architecture at the University of Notre Dame and author of The Church Building as a Sacred Place: Beauty, Transcendence and the Eternal.

“ ‘It shows the talent of the bishop, the architect and the craftsmen,’ he said. …

“Theories vary about the medieval intent behind the gargoyles. Were they to ward off evil spirits? Did they represent the demonic realm outside the sanctuary of the church? Were they allegorical figures for morality lessons? Or simply the imaginative fruits of medieval craftsmen?”

Permission to imagine.

More at AP, here. No firewall.

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Photo: Cross Border Orchestra of Ireland.
The peace proms involves 6,000 children from schools all over the island, from diverse backgrounds and abilities.

Today’s story is not necessarily a holiday topic unless peace is a holiday topic. … Well, there’s that.

Niall McCracken wrote at the BBC about one longstanding Irish peace initiative.

“The passion of 15-year-old Cara is written all over her face as she takes her handmade violin from its case. She is one of the youngest musicians in the Cross Border Orchestra of Ireland.

“I’m in Dundalk, County Louth, in the Republic of Ireland,” McCracken continues, “to watch her and more than 100 other young musicians rehearse ahead of a series of concerts. Cara, from County Down, plays in the strings section of the orchestra that emerged out of the Northern Ireland peace process.

“It was set up in 1995, a year after republican and loyalist paramilitaries announced ceasefires. This followed more than a quarter of a century of violence in Northern Ireland.

“The key aim was to use music to connect young people from Catholic and Protestant backgrounds on both sides of the Irish border. Almost 30 years on, this remains the central goal of the 140-member orchestra.

“Cara attends a Catholic girls’ grammar school in Ballynahinch and has always loved music.

” ‘I started playing violin and piano when I was young. You have to practise a lot but it’s taught me so much about perseverance,’ she said. … ‘There are still aspects of life in Northern Ireland that can make it difficult to meet people from different backgrounds. … Going to the orchestra has been great because I’ve made friends from all sides of the community, all over the country.’

“The orchestra has also ignited Cara’s love for different types of music. ‘I just wouldn’t have listened to things like Ulster-Scots music, simply because I just wouldn’t have been exposed to it because it wasn’t played where I live. But I love the pipes they use and getting to become immersed in that Ulster-Scots music and culture has given me a whole new perspective.’

“The orchestra combines Ulster-Scots culture, including bagpipes and Lambeg drums, with Irish traditional instruments such as uilleann pipes, the harp, the fiddle and bodhrán (drum). They also have their own take on some of the biggest pop, rock and dance songs in the charts.

“A diverse range of music has been key to the project’s success, according to the orchestra’s founder Sharon Treacy-Dunne.

“She is originally from Hackballscross, a rural village in County Louth in the Republic of Ireland, a few miles south of the border with Northern Ireland.

” ‘Growing up in the 1970s and 80s, and as a young teacher in Dundalk in the early to mid-90s, before the ceasefire and the Good Friday peace agreement, I remember being really worried about what I was seeing,’ she said. … ‘Then in 1994 when we reached this momentous ceasefire, as a teacher I thought I needed to be some sort of role model. The only thing I knew was music.’

“Sharon began writing to schools on both sides of the Irish border about taking part in the orchestra. She said: ‘To be honest it took a while to bring some of the Protestant schools on board, but music was the answer. Once we made it clear that we were also using music that was important to them with instruments such as pipes and Lambeg drums, that was a huge turning point.’ …

“Being part of the orchestra also means young people like Cara had the chance to perform at New York’s famous Carnegie Hall on St Patrick’s Day earlier [in 2022].

” ‘It was unbelievable, I could never have imagined having an opportunity like that, but music just opens up so many doors,’ she said.

“The New York concert was part of a series of events to mark the 25th anniversary of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. The deal brought an end to 30 years of conflict in Northern Ireland, known as the Troubles.”

More at the BBC, here. No paywall. Upcoming events orchestra here.

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Do you remember the British comedy group “Beyond the Fringe”? We love the LP record in our house.

I was thinking about a Peter Cook “Beyond the Fringe” sketch today because I have been reading tweets in Latin and my husband and I always joke about the English miner in Cook’s “Sitting on the Bench” routine who was wistful about not becoming a judge.

“I could have been a judge, but I never had the Latin, never had the Latin for the judgin’.”

The Latin tweets I’ve been following are from Pope Francis, who is said to have gathered a large following who just like Latin. I am not a Catholic, but a lot of what the new Pope has said impresses me, especially his cautions against materialism and his concern for those who suffer. I also like exercising the rusty hinges in my brain where fuzzy memories of Latin are stored. And if I don’t quite get the whole tweet, Google Translate is available — and turns out to be much better at Latin than, say, Swedish or Arabic.

I retweeted this missive:

Papa Franciscus ‏@Pontifex_ln 22 Jun
Si sensum vitae in Iesu invenimus, eos negligere non possumus qui patiuntur quique sunt tristes.

Google Translate: If we find the meaning of life in Jesus, we can not ignore those who suffer and those who are sad.

Photo: AFP/Getty Images

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