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French tug-of-war over remains of Lourdes saint

Published: 03 May 2015 - 04:43 pm | Last Updated: 14 Jan 2022 - 04:09 pm

 

 

 


Lourdes, France--For many visitors to Lourdes it comes as a surprise that the saint whose visions of the Virgin Mary made the French town a major Catholic pilgrimage site is not actually buried there.
The remains of Bernadette Soubirous are now the subject of a tug-of-war between those who want her brought home, and the town of Nevers where her body is preserved in a shrine.
Lourdes, in southwestern France, draws six million people a year to visit a shrine in a grotto where Mary is said to have appeared to the poor shepherd girl Bernadette 18 times in 1858, and to bathe in the purportedly healing waters of a spring in the cave.
"Ah really! That's a surprise," said Michel, a pilgrim visiting the grotto, upon learning that Bernadette's remains were not at the site, but 700 kilometres (435 miles) north in Nevers.
It was to this French town that Bernadette went to join a convent aged 22 to escape the crowds and attention after her visions, and it was there that she died aged 35.
"The time has come" to return her remains to Lourdes, argues Jose Marthe, a regional councillor who formed an association with descendants of the saint's family to lobby for her return.
"Our intentions are pure."
But Nevers Mayor Denis Thuriot is not so sure. "It's obvious that the association, even if it denies it, is only looking to draw more tourists" to Lourdes, he said this week.
He deplored that "neither the association nor the descendants of Saint Bernadette have the heart to defend her memory or the wish of a woman who wanted to remain simple and anonymous, and found in Nevers a refuge and peace that today is being disturbed."
Marthe and the 300 members of the association, however, argue that Bernadette would have wanted to be laid to rest in Lourdes.
Benoit Casterot, a descendant of Bernadette's mother, is one of the association's leaders and says it "is absolutely logical that this local girl, our idol, return to Lourdes."
Another distant relative Francis Bayoumeu -- who married Bernadette's great grand-niece and runs her parents' house as a museum -- insists the saint "never wanted to leave Lourdes".
"Bernadette left under duress because of the media pressure," he told AFP.

AFP