As we slowed at one steep path, I caught movement in my peripheral vision and turned towards it. I saw a figure of a young woman dressed in long, dark garment emerging from a derelict mausoleum. Slipping my camera out from under my rain slicker, I quickly squeezed off a shot, not stopping for clarity or composition. Although I was partially hidden by an obelisque, the girl saw the camera mid-photo and ducked into the shadow of the sepulcher.
Before I could take another picture, she quickly exited the structure, ran up the hill and out of site. From my position I could see vestiges of a sleeping bag on the floor of the mausoleum, but by that time I was too wet to go back to capture that image. (Luckily, the interior was shallow and when I developed the film, I was able to "dodge out" some shade to reveal the dark-robed girl ducking back inside.)
We continued down the hill back to Round-Pont Casimir-Perier to find that my husband was already there, dry and patient under our umbrella. Anne and I recounted what we had seen, he added that while he was waiting for us to return, he said that when the storm began he saw at least a dozen scruffy but black-clad individuals walking up the hill toward what he speculated was some pre-ordained meeting place.
We decided to find a drier place to continue our conjectures adjourning to a café across the street, La Brasserie du Père-Lachaise. What kind of cult gave you the courage to sleep in a tomb? Were they homeless? How did they manage to stay inside the cemetery without police intervention? There is a grumpy guard now stationed at Jim Morrison’s grave that kept visitors from hanging-out too long. But there are people sleeping there? Hmm…interesting.
I decided to ask our waiter, whose English was better than my French what he knew. He related what he knew was there were some that lived in the area that were devoted to spiritualist, Allan Kardec whose writings influenced magico-religious beliefs. He was buried in section 44 on chemin du Quinconce. There was also talk of a little known trendy sub-group of young people that were convinced that the vampire Lestat was also buried here under the pseudonym of Prince Armand. (made famous by Tom Cruises in "Interview with a Vampire") I groaned inwardly at that last piece of information; I guess determining the real reasons would take more time to discover than I had this trip.
I have yet to discover the path to understanding exactly the reason this group of people we had stumbled across were lingering in the city of the dead. I am still looking for clues among the living. But I am fairly certain that these crypt-keepers still make Père Lachaise a living, breathing Parisian monument.
Père Lachaise cemetery is having the 200th anniversary of its opening, on Friday, 21. May 2004