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Garden
gnomes are all the rage in Paris and have become something of a status
symbol in French gardens. Last month, Paris' chic Bagatelle gardens opened
the country's first exhibit dedicated to the gnomes. The exhibit featured
2,000 of the elfin figures, carefully placed amid the peonies and lilac
bushes. And then the Garden Gnome Liberation Front struck. According to
a Reuters report, 20 of the gnomes were stolen during a nighttime raid.
The Garden Gnome Liberation Front claimed responsibility, and said it would
strike again unless the exhibit was closed and all of the gnomes released.
"We demand," the group's statement said, "that garden gnomes are no longer
ridiculed and that they be released into their natural habitat."
Organizers
of the exhibit have said they will not bow to the front's demands, but
the front is not a group to be trifled with. In 1997, it was fined for
the disappearance of some 150 gnomes. And in 1998, a "mass suicide" of
gnomes in the city of Briey in eastern France was attributed to the group.
The 11 gnomes were discovered hanging by their necks under a bridge, their
little bodies swaying in the wind. A letter found nearby explained, "When
you read these few words we will no longer be part of your selfish world,
where we serve merely as pretty decoration." |