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Within the university, students and professors scrutinize every possible aspect of our universe -- from the billions of galaxies to subatomic particles, electrons, quarks -- but they assiduously avoid examining their own lives. In the wider world, we keep hectically busy and fill every free moment of the day with some form of diversion -- work, computers, television, movies, radio, magazines, newspapers, sports, alcohol, drugs, parties. Perhaps we distract ourselves because looking at our lives confronts us with our lack of meaning, our unhappiness, and our loneliness -- and with the difficulty, the fragility, and the unbelievable brevity of life.

— Dr. Armand M. Nicholi, Jr., The Question of God: C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud Debate God, Love, Sex, and the Meaning of Life

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A mini-guide to Paris, France

Wendy and I spent a week in Paris in May of 2000. Paris is where I served my mission from 1992 - 1994, and where my brother Michael served from 1999 - 2001. Kevin's in other parts of France right now. Since we occasionally get requests for information on the best sites to see in Paris, I thought I'd publish the following, a version of a message I sent to friends and family shortly after returning. Although I'm no Rick Steves, I'll eventually fill this in with some photos and other links to hopefully provide a quick travel guide.

Paris 2000

Photo Galleries:
2000 visit | Mission photos (1992-94)
(or click on the links below)

Place de la ConcordePlace de la Concorde -- This is where Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI were beheaded. Now it's a large square filled with fountains and an Egyptian obelisk. From here you can see the Eiffel Tower, Hôtel des Invalides, the Champs-Élysées, The Arc de Triomphe, and La Madeleine. More on those later. We visited this place several times to see the sites in various shades of night and day.

Le Marais & Châtelet-Les Halles -- This is one of my favorite parts of Paris. Eat falafels in the Jewish Quarter, watch street performers by Centre Georges Pompidou. Lots of pastries in this area (along with most other areas): pains au chocolat, réligieuses, baguettes, and crêpes.

Hotel des InvalidesHôtel des Invalides -- home of Napoleon's tomb and a military museum.

Rodin Museum -- Balzac, The Thinker and a bunch of other naked statues.

Musée d'Orsay -- Everything from Impressionism on: van Gogh, Monet, Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, Manet, Renoir, Rodin, Whistler, etc. My favorite is Cain by a lesser-known artist. Eugène Burnand's Les disciples Pierre et Jean courant au sépulcre le matin de la Résurrection

The Louvre -- Everything from Impressionism back: da Vinci's Mona Lisa, Michelangelo's Slave, Venus de Milo, Egyptian artifacts, etc.

Arc de Triomphe -- climbed 400 stairs to the top for a great view of the city.

Eiffel TowerEiffel Tower -- took a Bâteau Mouche (boat on the Seine River) tour from here, spent some time in the park, bought overpriced bottled water, took lots of pictures, didn't go to the top.

Champs-Élysées -- the big road that connects Place de la Concorde to the Arc de Triomphe. We walked down this a couple of times to do some people-watching and to visit the Virgin Megastore. Sacre Coeur

Victor Hugo's home -- pretty boring tour, but cool to have been there.

Basilique du Sacre Coeur -- large white church on the top of a hill.

Montmartre -- near Sacre Coeur are a bunch of Bohemian sites: Picasso's studio, van Gogh's apartment, hangouts of famous poets and authors, Place du Tertre where all the aspiring artists (con and otherwise) congregate. Down the hill is the Pigalle area, home to the Moulin Rouge and tons of good music shops.

Versailles -- Palace of the Sun King, Louis XIV, crowned and married at the age of four. We went on the tour of the gardens on a Sunday afternoon, the only time they run the immense (and expensive to operate) system of fountains, accompanied by Baroque music. We also toured the Palace. The Versailles Treaty was signed in the Hall of Mirrors, ending the First World War.

Sainte-Chapelle -- Wendy's second favorite. Incredible stained glass windows that tell the history of the world from Genesis to the Second Coming with the life of Christ in the center. Moses is depicted with horns because of a mistranslation of the Bible in medieval times.

Notre Dame de Paris Cathédrale de Notre Dame -- took 200 years to build. Tried to go to the top, but the line was too long. After the gargoyles up top, my favorite feature is the depiction over the center door of the Final Judgment with Christ in the center, devils taking people off to His left, and angels taking others off to His right.

Catacombs -- bunches of bones unearthed from Parisian cemeteries and arranged by monks in underground tunnels. Ours was the quickest tour on record, with Wendy pulling me through the tunnel maze as quickly as she could run.

Pere Lachaise Cemetery -- This was right by our hotel. Its claim to fame is (much to the dismay of the French) the grave of Jim Morrison (of The Doors), which can easily be found by following the graffiti. Among the others buried here are Frederic Chopin and Oscar Wilde.


Back to:
Justin | HillFamily.net


Recommended Reading


French Links
Rick Steves' Paris 2005 -- Rick Steves
The best travel guide out there. You can skip the lines and fees for guided tours and follow the self-guided tours in this book. The authors provide just the right mix of history, humor, and culture for seasoned travelers and culturephobes alike. This book covers everything from phone cards to museum passes to metro navigation. The appendix includes a brief history of France and some key French phrases. Skim the book before you get there and you'll find yourself going from cover to cover once you're in Paris.

Eyewitness Travel Guide: Paris -- Alan Tillier
Excellent full-color photos and descriptions of all the best sites in Paris. A great souvenir book for after the trip when you're trying to remember what a particular monument was called.

Weird Europe : A Guide to Bizarre, MacAbre, and Just Plain Weird Sights -- Kristan Lawson, Anneli S. Rufus
Intrigued by the Catacombs? Only a few of the locations featured in this book are in Paris, but if you're visiting other locations in Europe. . .

Travelers' Tales France -- James P. O'Reilly (Editor)
Entertaining essays from those who have gone before us.

Travelers' Tales Paris -- James P. O'Reilly (Editor)
And for a closer look at Paris. . .

Family Travel: The Farther You Go, the Closer You Get -- Laura Manske (Editor)
We left our daughter with her grandparents, but if you're considering taking the kids you should check out this book of family adventures written by world travelers. It might give you some ideas for your own travelogue when you return.

News in French:
Le Monde
Le Parisien
L'Express

White & Yellow Pages:
Pages Blanches et Jaunes

Maps:
Plans de Paris
Map-O-Rama
Cartes de France
Cartes de Pere Lachaise

Tourism:
RATP (Paris rail system)
Les Pages de Paris
Pere Lachaise
Paris France Mairie
france travel

Search Engines:
Yahoo! France
Google France
MSN France
Tiscali

Languages:
AltaVista Translations
The Human-Languages Page
Tennessee Bob's
Paris Anglophone

Amazing website

Submitted by Sister K (not verified) on Mon, 05/28/2007 - 12:56.

We just returned from a trip to Paris and other cities in Europe, and found your site while looking for information to put in our scrapbook. Your site is incredible! We wish we would have found it before this trip, but we will continue referring to it for our future travels. We converted a few years ago as did our 3 younger sons- one is almost 16 and recently shared he's unsure about serving a mission. We shared these photos and your website in general, and he has been very inspired by the glimpse into your mission. Thank you for sharing your information- and the spirit =)
The Koenig Family (Wisconsin)

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