-Caveat Lector-

Plague of plaques bemuses Parisians
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4545892,00.html
Jon Henley in Paris
Thursday November 14, 2002
The Guardian

They are what the French call ludique, which is to say playful, amusing and, by 
extension,
really rather puzzling: nobody knows why they are there, who put them up, or even when
they first appeared.

But the rash of bizarre, fake commemorative plaques that has suddenly begun gracing the
streets of Paris has got the city council worried. There is, after all, a proper 
procedure to
be followed in such matters, and whoever is responsible is manifestly not following it.

Perfect copies of the marble slabs that usually indicate the spot where a young 
resistance
fighter died, or the past residence of a celebrated writer or composer, the plaques
commemorate either nothing at all, or someone who appears never to have existed.

"On April 17 1967," reads one, "nothing happened here." Another, on the rue 
Saint-Sauveur
in the second arrondissement, declares: "Karima Bentiffa, civil servant, lived in this 
building
from 1984 to 1989."

The public records office contains no evidence that a Karima Bentiffa has ever lived
anywhere in the Ile-de-France region, nor indeed a certain Pierre Salatier, who 
according
to a third plaque is a computer programmer and was born at no.17, rue du Jour on
November 12 1976.

Yet another takes the game into new realms of the absurd. "This plaque," it proudly
announces, "was affixed on December 19 1953."

In fact, bemused local residents say, it has probably been there since sometime last 
week.
Or maybe it was last month. Nobody really knows.

"I thought they were quite funny at first," said Claire de Clermont-Tonnerre, a 
conservative
city councillor. "But on reflection, they detract from the real ones. Their unregulated
proliferation is not very respectful of those people who really marked history."

At Ms Clermont-Tonnerre's urgent request, the council this week debated the issue and
decided it was up to the buildings' owners to decide whether they wanted to remove 
them.
The city's responsibility was confined to supervising the often interminable procedure
governing who deserved a genuine plaque, it ruled.

So, for the time being, the phantom plaque-placer is likely to continue his mission
undisturbed. It is at least more more tasteful than the unknown artist who for several
months two years ago mystified many Parisians by planting small tricolour flags in a
selection of dog turds.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002

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