The church Notre-Dame-du-Bon-Secours is a Catholic church located in Bobigny, Seine-Saint-Denis, dedicated to Notre-Dame du Bon Secours. It was built in a neighbourhood then called New-Bobigny or New Village, south of the City of the Drinker, in an area that was growing in population. This area, which was populated by eight thousand inhabitants at the time of its construction, was severely lacking religious infrastructure, justifying the initiative of its foundation.
The building of the church was launched in 1925 by Father Louis Canet, parish priest of Bobigny, after the acquisition of land in the heart of the new village. Consecrated as chapel on 26 February 1928 by Bishop Louis-Ernest Dubois, it quickly became a symbol of local socio-political tensions. In the 1930s, the context of rivalry between the Church and the Communist Party materialized through red baptisms in front of the building, such as that of 1 July 1934, where anticlerical songs were performed. These events, sometimes formalized by acts registered in town hall, illustrate Bobigny's political and social anchor at that time.
Architecturally, the church is distinguished by its sober pink brick facade, pierced by three openings and surmounted by an oculus, all crowned by an openwork bell tower housing a bell. This modest style reflects both the means of the time and the community vocation of the place, designed to serve an urban and social changing neighbourhood. Its history remains marked by this dual heritage: religious for the faithful, and political for the inhabitants of Bobigny.
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