FIELD REPORT: Life Amidst the Living at Pere Lachaise Cemetery, Paris

December 18, 2009

In a city devoted to the dead, a cemetery’s living inhabitants sometimes go without notice.  After four months of nearly daily pilgrimages to graveyards, I now begin my acquaintanceship by seeking out the live guides – the cats and birds, the flowers and plants and lichens.  They are different there than elsewhere. Calmer, I think.  Possessed of something extra. They soothe, and they help me see.

Pere Lachaise is an immense place – magnificent and distressing and humbling and amusing and absolutely teeming with activity.

On this particular winter’s day, I was searching for signs of life.

Living at the Pere Lachaise Cemetery

The lurid green of the lichens and the mosses, with the French ivy preparing for its white firecrackers of winter bloom. On a spot of hot granite, the kitty bathes her claws…a raspberry tongue rasping away


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What's beyond the iron gate, Lady Kitty?

Her spats glow a little in the shadows. At first glance, she’s not even there. She is a granite and marble colored cat, at home amidst the somber-hued palette of bone, charcoal, and grey.  Her signs of movement reveal her existence…little white fangs honing in on a direction, like twin needles on a feline compass.  She seems to know where she’s going. What’s happening with that coffin there, Lady Kitty, away beyond the iron gate?

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Oooh, we'd best take a closer look...

Oooh, we’d best take a closer look inside this crypt. The iron door oxidizes a little every day, dissolving and evolving. If you are absolutely utterly silent, you can hear the process. It sounds like leaves falling, like hair being combed, like a thousand tiny clippers snipping fingernails. The sound of orange, of earth, of change. 

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Cat houses in the crypt

Tucked away behind the iron gate, a cosy cardboard cat house. It is a house-within-a-house. Down below is the coffin, and up above are these little insulated kitty houses, made and maintained by the women of Paris. Meow!

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One response to FIELD REPORT: Life Amidst the Living at Pere Lachaise Cemetery, Paris

  1. […] In February, I was lucky enough to visit a few Afterlives-related sites in Paris and London with my father. At the top of the list was Père Lachaise, a sprawling village of the dead in the 20th arrondissement of Paris. Wikipedia says it’s the most-visited cemetery in the world, which isn’t hard to believe (though who keeps track of these things?). When I visited, men half-crazed with cold sold tourist maps outside the entrance to a steady stream of young art students, couples, and tourists from around the world. I hear that when it warms up the place is even more crowded, with both tourists and hundreds (thousands?) of resident cats. […]

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