
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
BUDAPEST/PARIS (Worthy News) – U.S. President-elect Donald J. Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky attended the reopening of Notre Dame Cathedral five years after a fire damaged the Paris landmark.
The opening, in the Christmas-decorated French capital, marked a bright spot in a world that Trump said “is going a little crazy right now.”
Reporters noted that a red carpet was rolled out for Trump as Macron bestowed the kind of diplomatic welcome that France usually offers only for sitting American presidents, complete with blaring trumpets and members of the Republican Guard in full uniform.
Although Trump doesn’t take office until January 20, 2025, the fanfare was a sign that Macron and other European leaders are already trying to win his favor as the U.S. representative on the world stage.
He attended a hastily arranged trilateral meeting proposed by Macron at the Élysée Palace shortly before the Notre Dame ceremony as Ukraine faces a blood-stained Christmas with Russian troops gaining more territory.
Trump has pledged to end the war within 24 hours of becoming president, though he has remained vague on how that could be achieved.
President Zelenskyy and European leaders have been concerned that Trump could withdraw U.S. military aid to Ukraine at a crucial juncture in Kyiv’s battle to repel Russia.
WORKING ON PEACE
Yet Zelenskyy later described the discussion in Paris as “good and productive,” noting that the three leaders agreed to continue working toward peace.
Trump said it was a “very great honor” to be there while hinting at the challenges ahead.
“It certainly seems like the world is going a little crazy right now. And we’ll be talking about that,” Trump said.
At the official residence of the French president, Macron went out of his way to project an image of close ties, offering handshakes and plenty of back-patting with Trump for the cameras before Zelenskyy joined.
In a video posted later on social media platform X, Macron could be heard asking Trump: “You remember?” as both men entered a reception room. “I remember,” Trump answered.
Trump spent about 90 minutes inside, meeting first with Macron before Zelenskyy joined them for about 35 minutes.
The three leaders reportedly spoke English, but a translator was in the room.
CONTINGENT OF ADVISERS
Accompanying Trump to Paris was a small contingent of advisers, including incoming chief of staff Susie Wiles and Steve Witkoff, a longtime friend and real estate investor whom Trump has tapped as his special envoy to the Middle East.
Massad Boulos, the father-in-law of Trump’s daughter Tiffany, who will serve as senior adviser on Arab and Middle Eastern affairs, was also accompanying Trump.
As Syria’s regime change was underway, Macron said the Middle East would also feature in the talks ahead of Notre Dame’s reopening.
When he accepted the invitation to travel to Paris, Trump said Macron had done “a wonderful job ensuring that Notre Dame has been restored to its full level of glory, and even more so. It will be a very special day for all!” Trump was president in 2019 when a fire nearly destroyed the 861-year-old Catholic cathedral.
The devastation prevented Notre Dame from holding a Christmas Mass in 2019 for the first time since 1803.
In 2020, investigators believed the fire had been “started by either a cigarette or a short circuit in the electrical system.”
U.S. President Joe Biden declined an invitation to attend the Notre Dame ceremony five years after the devastating fire, with the White House citing a scheduling conflict. First lady Jill Biden was the official U.S. representative in his place.
The First Lady was later seen in a friendly conversation with Trump sitting nearby in the Notre Dame in Paris, the “City of Love” where past misgivings are fastly forgotten.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) launched a sweeping series of airstrikes across southern Lebanon and the Beqaa Valley on Monday, targeting what it described as Hezbollah sites used for rocket launches and the production and storage of strategic weapons. The attacks marked one of the most extensive Israeli operations in Lebanon in months, killing at least three Hezbollah operatives in the past 24 hours, according to the military.
Residents on Luzon Island, the largest and most populated island of the Philippines, assessed the damage early Monday after a sleepless night when Super Typhoon Fung-wong, locally known as Uwan, killed at least two people and injured several others.
More than 50 prominent Christian leaders are calling on President Trump to directly confront Syria’s new president about the ongoing persecution of religious minorities when the two leaders meet Monday at the White House, marking a historic first for U.S.-Syria relations.
In a decisive break from Democratic obstruction that has paralyzed the federal government for over a month, the U.S. Senate on Sunday night voted 60-40 to advance legislation ending the record-breaking 40-day government shutdown, marking a significant victory for Republican fiscal discipline and President Donald Trump’s healthcare reform agenda.
A group of Hamas fighters trapped inside tunnels on the Israeli-controlled side of the Rafah ceasefire line have vowed not to surrender to Israeli forces, the Al-Qassam Brigades announced Sunday, in a move that could jeopardize the fragile month-old ceasefire in Gaza.
Archaeologists in Jerusalem have uncovered an extraordinary 2,700-year-old pottery fragment inscribed with Assyrian cuneiform near the Temple Mount — the first written evidence of direct contact between the Assyrian Empire and the Kingdom of Judah ever discovered in the city. The find, announced by the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), offers striking confirmation of the biblical narrative of King Hezekiah’s resistance to Assyrian domination recorded in II Kings 18.
Iranian officials are warning of imminent water rationing—and even the potential evacuation of Tehran—as the nation faces its worst drought in nearly a century.