It's impressive that Montreal has 4 Basilicas. The only other city in North America with 4 Basilicas is New York.
Quebec has a huge chunk of the Catholic Basilicas in Canada. Though, I've included two other basilicas which could arguably be considered part of "French Canada".
I grew up in Saint Boniface, and this was always one of my favourite places to go as a kid. The ruins of the old Saint Boniface Basilica,
which burned down in 1968.
Cathédrale Saint-Boniface has since been rebuilt, but the ruins of the old basilica remain.
The Saint Boniface Cathedral as seen in July 1961, seven years before the fire. (Winnipeg Tribune collection/University of Manitoba Archives)
Heavy smoke chokes the air in St. Boniface during the fire on July 22, 1968. (Winnipeg Tribune collection/University of Manitoba Archives)
A crowd watches flames consume the cathedral's roof in 1968. (Maurice Desloges)
One of the towers begins to collapse during the 1968 fire. (Maurice Desloges)
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I think this place proves that sometimes something even more beautiful can be born out of disaster. This is one of the greatest ruins in Canada in my opinion, and of all the places that make me miss living in Winnipeg, this is near the top of the list...... but nothing beats the
CAN-D-MAN building. Which, i've heard has turned into a bit of a ruin itself. 😅
I'm sure the original Saint Boniface Cathedral was a very beautiful Church, but as a place to go as a kid, whether on a nice summer day, or in the middle of the winter, the ruins of a cathedral are a lot more interesting place to be than stuck inside of a Church with your family.
Luckily, I was raised by some very lapsed Catholics, so I didn't have to spend too much time in churches, but my grandparents were quite devote Catholics... anytime us grand kids went on a road trip with them, no matter where, and even if there was no Catholic Church, they would make us go to Sunday Mass with them in whatever place that was. We hated it as kids, but in retrospect, it was something that we'll always remember, and it makes me respect my grandparents even more than I did as a kid, because they made us experience things that our parents wouldn't make us partake in. Those trips with my grandparents are some of the only times I've attended non Catholic Masses.
My policy on attending mass remains pretty well unchanged since graduating from my Catholic high school. Weddings and Funerals only. However, should the Catholic Church ever allow gay marriages, allow females to be priests, or make nuns equal to priests/ eligible to become the pontiff, I will at least show up for mass to witness history, but I don't think I'll ever be anything more than someone who is "conveniently" Catholic. Though, If they brought back latin mass sometimes, I might go to church just to vibe out.
Attending a latin mass in one of those huge Cathedrals in Quebec would really be something else... I wonder if any of them do offer Latin service? 🤔