
PARIS (AP) — Coordinated terrorist attacks turned Paris into a theater of blood and calamity 10 years ago Thursday, with gunfire on café terraces, explosions by a stadium and a nighttime massacre at the Bataclan concert hall leaving 132 people dead and hundreds injured.
Many families measure time as “before” and “after” the attacks. The night reshaped France’s sense of safety and purpose, hardening security while deepening a civic reflex for solidarity that endures a decade on.
Paris is marking the Thursday anniversary with a sequence of tributes led by President Emmanuel Macron and Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo at each attack site: the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, then the cafés and restaurants in the 10th and 11th arrondissements, and finally the Bataclan, with a minute of silence before each memorial plaque. Parents, partners and friends of victims will stand closest to the plaques, officials said.
At Place de la République, Parisians are invited to leave candles, flowers and notes at the foot of the statue of national symbol Marianne, as in 2015, and to follow the ceremonies on a giant screen. Children are expected to come with parents to light candles and lay flowers — small, familiar gestures that turn the square into shared memory. City officials asked the public to keep gatherings calm and give families space at the memorials.
The commemorations will culminate with the Jardin du 13-Novembre, a new memorial garden opposite City Hall. Conceived with victims’ associations, it bears the 132 names of those killed on granite stelae, with plantings that echo the attack sites and benches for reflection. Designers added small signs of life — bird baths, nesting boxes, shade — for children at the request of families. The ceremony is scheduled for 6 p.m. and will be attended by Macron and Hidalgo.
The Eiffel Tower is to be lit in the colors of the French flag after nightfall. The French soccer federation will observe a minute of silence and other tributes at France’s World Cup qualifier against Ukraine at the Parc des Princes.
On Nov. 13, 2015 — a Friday — nine Islamic State group gunmen and suicide bombers struck within minutes of one another. Suicide bombers detonated outside the Stade de France; gunmen sprayed bullets across café terraces; and three attackers stormed the Bataclan at 9:47 p.m., killing 90 people before police ended the siege. Two survivors who later died by suicide have since been recognized among the victims.
For survivors, the date reopens wounds.
“The 10th anniversary is here and emotions and tension are everywhere for us survivors,” said Arthur Dénouveaux, who escaped the Bataclan and leads the Life for Paris association. “You never fully heal. You just learn to live differently.”
Many describe a second task after grief: rebuilding the ordinary — work, friendship, noise — without flinching.
A 2021–2022 trial ended with life imprisonment without parole for Salah Abdeslam, the lone surviving assailant, and convictions for 19 others. For many, accountability did not erase the strain of trauma or the daily work of recovery; it clarified what must be protected.
As names are read and wreaths laid, the message from officials and families is consistent: remember the victims, honor the responders, and preserve the ordinary pleasures the attackers meant to destroy.
The goal, planners say, is simple: grief without spectacle, memory with room for the living.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
What you need to know about Trump accounts as Michael and Susan Dell donate $6 billion to the new early childhood investment program - 2
Anthony Joshua's driver charged over Nigeria crash that killed two - 3
Israel's haredi draft crisis: Court ruling and political stalemate reach breaking point - 4
Picking the Right Pot for Your Plants: An Aide for Plant Devotees - 5
Figure out How to Stay away from Normal Handshaking Missteps
My Excursion to a Better Way of life: Health Experiences
Figuring out the Justification for Separation: To blame and No-Shortcoming
7 Moves toward a Sound and Dynamic Way of life
You finally got a doctor's appointment. Here's how to get the most out of it
Watching ‘Home Alone’ with the kids this holiday season? Brace yourself for '6-7.'
Astrophotographer captures rare footage of the Hubble Telescope crossing the sun (video)
Vacuum Cleaners That Are Not difficult To Use For Home
Meet Beef the bulldog, who takes slow walks with his 78-year-old friend
Best Pizza Beating: What's Your #1?













