Hundreds of people have fired this Monday in Paris to the twins Igor and Grichka Bogdanoff, the controversial antivacional scientific twin who died from Covid with five days of difference, a little over a week ago.
Among the thousand people gathered at the doors of the Madeleine church to dismiss the brothers were numerous denacians and antivacunas, such as singer Francis Lalanne, become a spokesman of those who refuse to vaccinate in France, who arrived without mask
.
Princess Helena de Yugoslavia, the writer Raphaël Enthoven and the former Minister Luc Ferry, among other well-known faces were attended.
The twins will be incinerated on Wednesday in the Saint-Lary Cemetery, the town near the Pyrenees where they were born and Gift of their grandmother, the Countess Bertha Kolowrat-Krakowsky, had a castle and rare after being repudiated by her husband for getting pregnant
Of his lover, the black tenor Rolad Hayes.

Nor has he missed the Mass Amelia de Borbón-Parma, the distant cousin of King Felipe Vi who was the third woman of Igor and mother of two of her six children.

The Book of Prayers of the Mass had printed a picture of the twins with the phrase that popularized: “In the universe nothing is impossible.”
“Igor and Grichka scanned the sky. His science has guided them towards the existence of God,” the priest in the homily has expressed.
Amelia de Borbón-Parma also had words for her husband of her: “You are not here anymore but you will always live in our hearts,” the France Presse agency reported.

Igor died on Monday last week, at 72, a week after his brother Grichka, because of the Covid.
Before becoming controversial celebrities in France thanks to television and its aesthetic operations, who always denied having done, the Bogdanoff brothers developed important careers.
Grichka was a doctorate in mathematics and Igor in theoretical physics at the University of Burgundy.
The thesis and publications of it, however, have been rejected and challenged by the vast majority of the scientific community.

Its popularity shot in the 80s with the Temps X program, where, dressed in astronaut costumes, talked about science and science fiction, issues that derived later towards controversial theories about extraterrestrials.