Louvre comes to poor French city, raising eyebrows
LENS, France - The Associated Press
France's President Francois Hollande is seen in front of " La Liberte Guidant le Peuple", a painting by Eugene Delacroix during the inauguration of the Louvre Museum in Lens, northern France, Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012. AP Photo
It’s an impoverished coal-mining town in northern France that was razed by two world wars and now faces soaring unemployment.Lens is an unlikely site for the bastion of French culture, the Louvre, to create a ?150 million extension, but it’s opening this week.
"Lens is a territory that’s suffered from every crisis, from every war," says Henri Loyrette, director of the Louvre. He says he hopes the museum will restimulate the region.
But for some locals, the palatial museum’s gesture to bring its Leonardo Da Vincis to a city with 24-percent unemployment sounds like Marie Antoinette’s words for the starving masses: "Let them eat cake."
"Why do we need a museum and culture here? We need money and jobs," says 26-year-old Amandine Grossemy.