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One of the people who was present in the Bataclan theatre on 13 November 2015 during the terrorist attacks was a French artist who works under the pseudonym Fred Dewilde. In October 2016, he published a graphic novel about his firsthand experience of these tragic events, named Mon Bataclan. [303] [304] [305]
For 40 years, the Bataclan had Jewish owners, Pascal and Joel Laloux, who sold the theatre to new owners on 11 September 2015. The theatre was a target for anti-Zionist activists, since the venue often held pro-Israel events. One extremist group called "Army of Islam" threatened the Bataclan in 2011 because its owners were Jews. [10] [11]
November 13: Attack on Paris is a 2018 French docu-series by French director duo the brothers Gédéon and Jules Naudet.The film depicts the events of November 13, 2015 when six locations around the city were attacked by ISIS terrorists, killing a total of 130 people and injuring hundreds more.
It’s been nearly seven years since the devastating November 2015 terrorist attacks on Paris that left 137 dead, and while the effects of the tragedy have been indirectly felt in a surge of ...
The tragic Paris attacks left 129 dead and many more mourning. But the French refuse to be afraid. Now, the husband of one of the victims has penned a powerful note addressed to his wife's killers ...
"It’s never really left the front of my mind," one survivor said. "It’s omnipresent for me."
He published the graphic novels Mon Bataclan (My Bataclan) in 2016 and La Morsure (The Bite) in 2018, both about the Bataclan. [4] He also contributed until his death, to the creation of a Terrorism Memorial Museum, which is expected to open its doors in 2027. [4] Dewilde committed suicide on 5 May 2024, at the age of 58. [3]
German director Kilian Riedhof’s drama You Will Not Have My Hate is inspired by the experiences of French writer Antoine Leiris, whose wife was killed in the Bataclan nightclub during the ...