French Gather for Bastille Day Binge

By MARILYN AUGUST
.c The Associated Press

BORAN-SUR-OISE, France (AP) - What better way to celebrate in this nation
than to eat? On Friday, the French commemorated Bastille Day with their
longest-ever lunch - a more than 600-mile stretch of ``Incredible Picnics.''

The giant banquet ran through 337 towns and cities, from northern Dunkirk to
Prats-de-Mollo on France's border with Spain.

``It's a bucolic rendezvous and a chance for townspeople to get to know each
other,'' said Philibert de Moustier, the deputy mayor and picnic organizer in
this sleepy village about 25 miles north of Paris. ``It's a time for renewing
old friendships.''

Despite an unseasonable chill and intermittent showers, some 1,000 people
from Boran turned out for the revolutionary picnic, a highlight of French
millennium festivities.

Families in rain slickers toting umbrellas, tents, folding tables and chairs,
coolers and picnic baskets brimming with homemade delicacies thronged to the
banks of the Oise River.

De Moustier, 43, a count and cereal farmer who lives in the centuries-old
family chateau, said locals waited until the last minute to unfurl a
mile-long ribbon of red-and-white checked tablecloth - as emblematic of
France as the tricolor flag - manufactured for the occasion.

Boran's quaint, one-lane bridge over the Oise was wrapped with leftover
tablecloth, Christo-style, creating a colorful backdrop against threatening
skies.

``We wouldn't have missed the picnic for anything, so we brought our parasol,
and plan to use it as an umbrella,'' said Francine Delattre, who entered her
crab quiche in Boran's Tastiest Picnic contest.

Besides lunch, there was a tug-of-war, pony rides and a tent where children
could have their faces painted.

Bastille Day marks the anniversary of the storming of the Bastille prison on
July 14, 1789, setting off the French Revolution, which put an end to the
monarchy.

Friday's $7 million extravaganza is the brainchild of Gad Weil, who said it
would help break down everyday barriers of class and social position still
palpable in this nation of 60 million.

Host towns and cities were chosen among picturesque sites along the Green
Meridian, a French invention for timekeeping and navigation the country used
until 1911, when the world adopted the Greenwich meridian, the imaginary
perpendicular line slicing the globe from the north to south poles.

The Green Meridian has been the focus of many 2000 celebrations in France.
Earlier this year, French schoolchildren planted thousands of trees along it,
and more recently, historian Claude Teillet has been doing the trek on foot,
recording ``brief sensations of pure happiness'' for Le Monde newspaper.

Paris sites for the picnic included the Louvre Museum's 18th century
courtyard, the famed Pont des Arts footbridge over the Seine, and the
Luxembourg Gardens, where some 17,000 picnickers were granted special
permission to lunch on the grass.

Elsewhere in France, the bistro-style tablecloth crossed air strips at Orly
airport, Carcassonne's medieval ramparts, high-speed TGV train tracks and
Roman ruins in southern France.

Some picnics had themes. The circus came to Savigny-sur-Orge south of Paris,
while Saint-Martin-du-Tertre, north of the capital, set up a giant chess
board peopled with live, costumed pieces.

Epinay-sur-Seine planned an Impressionist picnic recalling the sun-drenched
landscapes of the famed 19th century school, and Morangis, a southern Paris
suburb, entertained picnickers with jousting matches, fire-eating and other
medieval games.

Boran, a medieval village nestled amid acres of wheat, corn and beetroot
fields with a population of 2,247, is close enough to Paris to one day become
a suburb.

For the moment, it's not. There are no supermarkets or high-rise apartment
buildings in sight, and free range chickens still can be bought on the farm
where they are raised.

``This is a great day for Boran,'' said Raymonde Dupuis, director of the
town's sports and culture association, taking shelter under a freshly trimmed
willow tree.

``It's as impressive as the day the Queen Mother (of England) came to Boran
by train to visit the town beach - the only sandy beach in the region.''


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