The Christian cross adorning some of Paris’s most recognizable buildings has been removed from the official poster promoting the 2024 Olympic and Paralympic games, which are being held in the French capital. Designed by the Parisian illustrator Ugo Gattoni, the surrealist poster features the Dôme des Invalides sans the cross, which sits atop its spire.
Gattoni’s poster was unveiled on Monday and displayed in Paris’s historic Musée d’Orsay. The design is actually two illustrations, one for the Olympic Games and another for the Paralympics, which can be combined into a single surrealist image of the city.
“It’s a new, key moment in the Paris 2024 story,” said Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet at the unveiling of the poster before continuing: “We’ve tried to be different and imagine posters that look like us, posters that go beyond a mere logo.”
Once considered “the eldest daughter of the Church,” the French nation became increasingly secular following the French Revolution in the 18th century. Subsequent governments in France have, at times, engaged in aggressive — and even violent — anti-Christian actions. The current French Republic, led by President Emmanuel Macron, has seen several ancient churches demolished — including one dating to the 12th Century, which was torn down last year. Over the last several years, incidents of vandalism and arson have destroyed many medieval Christian churches around the country.
Christians have not been alone in being persecuted for their religion in France. Following Hamas’s barbaric October 7 terrorist attack against Israel, Jewish neighborhoods around France saw upticks in anti-semitic attacks.
PARIS
The French Republic has removed images of the Cross from promotional materials for the 2024 Paris Olympics
Are Christians unwelcome at the Summer Olympics this year? pic.twitter.com/Q4abQ12VnK
— Catholic Arena (@CatholicArena) March 5, 2024
This week, France became the first country in the world to enshrine the murder of unborn babies into its constitution.