Pantheon: Elizabeth Borne Wants to Degenerate the Inscription on the Monument Pediment
4 Articles
4 Articles
Seven great women are honoured at the Pantheon. To encourage girls to follow their example, the Minister of National Education, Élisabeth Borne, proposes to degenerate the inscription on the pediment of the monument. An idea that is debated.
"To the great men, the grateful homeland." For more than two centuries, the inscription engraved on the pediment of the Pantheon resonates as a solemn promise: the Republic honors those who have served the Nation at the price of their genius, courage or sacrifice. But at a time when female figures like Marie Curie, Germaine Tillion, Simone Veil or Josephine Baker are resting in the crypt, the formula sounds strangely incomplete.
The Minister of Education wants to return to history by changing the pediment of the iconic Parisian monument It was the re-entry of classes on August 27 for Elisabeth Borne, in advance of the first strikes of her flocks (consecutive to too short holidays). At a memorable press conference (at which she made her paper sound), she said that the education of young girls was taking her attention. However, in the scientific field, "too often young gi…
The Minister of National Education, Élisabeth Borne, proposed Wednesday, August 27th to rethink the motto inscribed on the pediment of the Pantheon, considered too genrée. At a press conference on the beginning of the school year...
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