[CPProt.net] French pledge cultural aid to stricken New Orleans
MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers)
museum-security at museum-security.org
Sat Nov 5 06:48:09 CET 2005
French pledge cultural aid to stricken New Orleans
04 Nov 2005 22:06:38 GMT
Source: Reuters
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By Michael Depp
NEW ORLEANS, Nov 4 (Reuters) - A delegation from France visited
hurricane-ravaged New Orleans on Friday to pledge cultural aid to the city
that was once the capital of its vast Louisiana colony.
"I'm here to offer you the cooperation of France on a concrete basis,"
French Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres told a City Hall news
conference with Mayor Ray Nagin through a translator. "We would like New
Orleans to be a world light post as it used to be."
De Vabres said France wanted to help rebuild the city's cultural life and
would start by providing aid for New Orleans musicians who scattered after
Katrina struck on Aug. 29.
Concerts are being organized across France to raise money for those affected
by the storm and some will be offered temporary financial aid, he said.
De Vabres said France also will loan 50 works of art from the Louvre for an
exhibit at the New Orleans Museum of Art in late 2006. Louvre president
Henri Loyette was in the delegation.
"The French are part of our history, part of our soul, and now they are
definitely part of our future," Mayor Nagin said. "This is the first time a
country has come here and stepped up to this level of commitment."
France's ties with New Orleans date back to 1682 when it claimed the city as
a French territory along with an area that now encompasses 10 states. The
territory was named for King Louis XIV.
In 1803, Napoleon sold the territory to the United States in the Louisiana
Purchase to fund his military campaigns, effectively doubling the nation's
size.
Along with government efforts, 25 French companies and their U.S.
subsidiaries have given $19.9 million to Katrina relief efforts, including
the deployment of the world's largest aircraft, the Airbus Beluga, to
dispense nearly 20 tons of emergency supplies after the storm.
The French delegation's visit came on the same day that Britain's Prince
Charles and wife Camilla Parker Bowles stopped in New Orleans as part of
their U.S. tour to visit a levee and a French Quarter school, prompting the
French minister to poke fun at how his announcement was overshadowed by the
British royal couple.
"I say long live competitiveness, because there is a very important European
personality who is going to come here to help," he said, referring to
Charles.
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