France remembers Bataclan attacks
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They’re both named Juliette. One is American, the other French. Each lost her father to a terror attack — the first in 9/11 in New York, the other in Paris, ten years ago. Out of shared grief, a rare friendship was born between the two Juliettes across the Atlantic.
Xavier Lesaffre, an emergency doctor on the November night in 2015 when terrorists unleashed mayhem on Paris, collects his thoughts carefully before recalling the sequence of events that led him
The events reshaped France’s sense of safety, leading to both hardened security and a deeper sense of solidarity.
They haven’t won in a war, but they’ve changed the battlefield: no longer the streets, but our minds. Opinion.
From the Stade de France to the Bataclan, ordinary citizens and officials paid tribute on Thursday to the 132 people whose lives were taken by the 2015 attacks. On Place de la République, a ceremony brought Parisians together late into the night.
The first half of Hughes’ Fox Business interview aired on March 9. The EODM frontman cited six security guards apparently not showing up and others acting what Hughes perceived to be strangely. “Out of respect for the police still investigating, I won ...
After Friday’s horrible tragedy, everyone is now familiar with Paris venue Le Bataclan, from your average metalhead to human cancers who deserve to die with their dicks in their mouths. A new piece in Billboard profiles the venue’s storied history ...
Sébastien and Charlotte should never have met. Yet their lives have been inextricably linked since a tragic night in November 2015, when the young man saved the pregnant woman clinging to a window ledge as they both tried to escape the terrorists.
Amazing news to report from France; nearly five months after a terror attack on Paris’ Le Bataclan left 89 concertgoers dead, the venue has confirmed it will reopen ...
Eagles of Death Metal returned to Le Bataclan for the first time since terrorists killed 89 people at their concert. Eagles of Death Metal have returned to the venue where their lives changed forever. Following their return to Paris and a performance with ...
They targeted fans at the Stade de France stadium and cafe-goers and ending with a bloodbath in the Bataclan, killing 130 people. Two survivors who later took their own life as consequence of the physical and mental trauma also have been recognized as victims.