Anne
and Pierre-Yves Guyomard, who married two years ago, were killed at the
Bataclan. The couple hoped to have children "some time soon", their
friend Leslie Winer told the Associated Press news agency. Mrs Guyomard
was a former student of musicology and a childcare assistant at a
nursery in the outskirts of Paris.
Anne-Laure Arruebo, 36
Anne-Laure
Arruebo worked as a customs inspector according to French media. She
was sitting outside one of the cafés which was attacked.
Armelle Pumir Anticevic, 46
Armelle
Pumir Anticevic was a production manager who lived in Paris and
attended the concert with her husband, who survived. She was an
extraordinary person who loved life, a friend told L'Independant
Asta Daikite, 35
French footballer Lassana Diarra revealed on Twitter
that he had lost his cousin, Asta Diakite, in one of the shootings. He
said she was like a "big sister" to him. She had gone shopping with a
nephew and was shot dead in the attack on the bar and restaurant in the
rue Alibert.
Bertrand Navarret, 38
Bertrand
Navarret was a carpenter. He had trained as a lawyer and practised for a
few years, but decided to take up carpentry instead and learned his
trade in Canada before moving to Capbreton, a surfing hotspot in
south-western France. Surfing was his real passion, according to
Liberation newspaper. He died at the Bataclan.
Cecile Coudon Peccadeau de L'Isle, 37
A
customs inspector who died along with her colleague Anne-Laure Arruebo.
Their trade union praised them on a personal and professional level,
saying they were dedicated to their work.
Cecile Martin, 33
Cecile Martin was a clinical psychologist. She died at the Bataclan.
Cedric Ginestou, 27
Management
consultant Cedric Ginestou was at the Belle Equipe on the rue de
Charonne when it was attacked. He graduated from business school in
Bordeaux in 2012 before moving to Paris.
Charlotte & Emilie Meaud, 29
Twin
sisters Charlotte and Emilie Meaud died at Le Carillon. Charlotte was
in charge of investments in start-up firms at Scientipole, a venture
capital firm. Emilie was an architect with Chartier Dalix. The firm said
it had lost "a colleague and a friend".
Chloe Boissinot, 27
Chloe
Boissinot was a student of land management who was dining at Le Petit
Cambodge. She was originally from Château-Larcher in the
Poitou-Charentes region, where 150 people held a silence in her honour.
Neighbours there told France Bleu Poitou she came from a "really
generous family".
Christophe Mutez, 48
Christophe
Mutez was an employee of PROS France, a software firm. He died in the
Bataclan attack. He is described as "kind and generous" in online
tributes.
Christophe Lellouche, 33
Christophe
Lellouche, was a fan of l'Olympique de Marseille football club and was a
former online communications professional. He died at the Bataclan. A
friend told La Provence newspaper how Christophe had helped him through a
period of severe illness.
Christopher Neuet-Shalter, 39
Christopher
Neuet-Shalter was a digital marketing consultant from Paris and father
of an 11-year-old girl. "He was kind, sweet, bright, always there for
those close to him," his partner told Le Parisien newspaper. "If you
mentioned his daughter's name, his face lit up."
Ciprian Calciu 32, & Lacramioara Pop, 29
Romanian
couple Ciprian Calciu and Lacramioara Pop were parents of an
18-month-old son. They were reportedly celebrating a birthday party at
La Belle Equipe bistro when they died. Lacramioara also had an
11-year-old daughter.
Claire Maitrot-Tapprest, 23
Claire
Maitrot-Tapprest was a student at business school in Reims. She died at
the Bataclan. "We have no words, such is the strength of our sadness,"
the school said in a statement.
David Perchirin, 41
David
Perchirin, 41, was a journalist turned schoolteacher. He taught in
Seine-Saint-Denis, a northern suburb of Paris. He died at the Bataclan.
His contemporaries at university said he had been a "major figure in
student life".
Elif Dogan, 27
Belgian
Elif Dogan worked in an IT company in Liege, a town in the east of
Belgium. She was with her friend Milko Jozic on the terrace of La Casa
Nostra pizzeria when they came under attack.
Emmanuel Bonnet, 47
Father-of-two
Emmanuel Bonnet trained staff at the Paris regional transport
authority. He was at the Bataclan with his son, who managed to get away.
Liberation newspaper says he was a music fan and would share a
favourite song on Facebook every week.
Estelle Rouat, 25
Estelle
Rouat was at the Bataclan. She was an English teacher in Colombes in
the north-western suburbs of Paris. Her family are organising a "happy"
procession with music to remember her, according to regional newspaper
Ouest France.
Fanny Minot, 29
Fanny
Minot was an editor at Le Petit Journal, a satirical TV news programme.
Presenter Yann Barthes paid tribute to her at the start of Monday's
broadcast. She died at the Bataclan. "She was such a loving,
compassionate person, with such an adventurous view on life," a friend
told the Associated Press news agency.
Franck Pitiot, 23
Franck
Pitiot was an engineering graduate who studied at Nancy, in the east of
France. He was at the Bataclan concert. His engineering school paid
tribute to his kindness and warmth.
Frederic Henninot, 45
Frederic Henninot died at the Bataclan. He was a bank worker from Cergy in the north-western suburbs of Paris and father of two.
Germain Ferey, 36
Germain Ferey was from Vienne-en-Bessin, a village in Normandy. He worked in media production and was at the Bataclan.
Gilles Leclerc, 32
Gilles
Leclerc worked with his mother as a florist in the north-western
suburbs of Paris. He had gone to the Bataclan concert with his
girlfriend Marianne, who survived.
Gregory Fosse, 28
Gregory
Fosse, a music scheduler for television channel D17, died at the
Bataclan. "We all knew his kindness, inimitable smile and the passion
for music which brought him to us," his employer wrote. "We have lost a
friend but also a talented guy."
Guillaume Le Dramp, 33
Guillaume
Le Dramp died having a drink outside the Belle Equipe bar. A loved one
told the AFP news agency he was "charming, warm, truly kind with a
wicked sense of humour".
Halima & Hodda Saadi, 36 & 35
Halima
Saadi, a Tunisian mother of two, was killed with her sister Hodda at La
Belle Equipe bar, according to Le Parisien newspaper. Their brother was
also in the bar but survived.
Helene Muyal, 35
Helene
Muyal, 35, died at the Bataclan and leaves behind a husband and son
aged 17 months. She was a make-up artist who worked on fashion shoots.
Her husband Antoine Leiris wrote a passionate piece on Facebook
addressed to his wife's killers after seeing her body. "I don't know
who you are and I don't want to know. You are dead souls. I won't give
you the gift of my hatred. It's what you sought, but answering hate with
anger would be to surrender to the same ignorance that has made you
what you are.''
Hugo Sarrade, 23
Hugo
Sarrade, 23, was killed at the Bataclan. He was studying at a
university in Montpellier and was in Paris to spend the weekend with his
father and to go to the concert. "Hugo played the guitar and loved rock
music. He was loving and full of kindness, and so open to other
cultures and ways of life," his father Stephane said.
Hyacinthe Koma, 36
Hyacinthe
Koma from Burkina Faso worked as a waiter at Chics Types restaurant and
was celebrating a birthday at La Belle Equipe bar.
Isabelle Merlin, 44
Isabelle
Merlin was an engineer who worked at the Continental electronics firm
in Rambouillet, to the south-west of Paris. She had a wide smile and an
extremely warm and dynamic character, friends told Le Parisien
newspaper. Outside of work, she studied music and singing. She was
friendly and funny, the director of her college told broadcaster France 3
Nord Pas-de-Calais.
Jean-Jacques Amiot, 68
Jean-Jacques
Amiot was a silkscreen printer who was at the Bataclan. "A pacifist, a
gentle man," his brother told French newspaper the Telegramme.
Jean-Jacques Kirchheim, 44
Jean-Jacques
Kirchheim worked for telecommunications firm Free. Friends told Le
Parisien newspaper he loved rock music and travelling. He died at the
Bataclan watching the Eagles of Death Metal.
Julien Galisson, 32
Julien Galisson was at the Bataclan. He lived in Nantes and loved music and travelling, according to 20 Minutes newspaper.
Justine Dupont, 34
Justine
Dupont was the manager of the Sainte Cécile social housing block in the
east of Paris. She was on the Rue de Charonne, near the Belle Equipe
bar.
Justine Moulin, 23
Justine
Moulin was a student living in Paris who was eating at Le Petit
Cambodge restaurant. Her parents were from Nieppe, a small town in the
north of France, according to La Voix du Nord newspaper.
Kheireddine Sahbi, 29
Kheireddine
Sahbi was a masters student in ethnomusicology caught up in the
restaurant attacks. "He was an Algerian virtuoso violinist, who came to
hone his skills in Paris, and was heavily involved in traditional
musical groups at the university," said the president of the Sorbonne.
Lamia Mondeguer, 30
Lamia Mondeguer was an agent for artists and a dual French-Egyptian citizen.
Lola Ouzounian, 17
Her father said: "May my little angel rest in peace, and may her smile remain ingrained in our memories forever."
Lola Salines, 29
Lola
Salines was an editor at Grund, a publishing company. According to
Liberation newspaper, she was in a roller derby team and travelled
widely as a child.
Lucie Dietrich, 37
Lucie Dietrich was a graphic designer at L'Etudiant (Student) magazine.
Madeleine Sadin, 30
Madeleine Sadin was a French teacher at a school in Vitry-sur-Seine, in the south-eastern suburbs of Paris.
Manu Perez, 40
Manu Perez, 40, was an employee of Universal Music.
Marie-Aimee Dalloz, 34
Marie-Aimee Dalloz was a bank worker from Paris and mother of one.
Mathias Dymarski, 22
Mathias
Dymarski was a keen BMX rider and recent civil engineering graduate who
studied in Metz, in north-east France, and was a project manager at a
business in Paris. He was the boyfriend of Marie Lausch who also died at
the Bataclan.
Matthieu de Rorthais, 32
Matthieu de Rorthais, 32, a music lover who had recovered from cancer. "He was kind, gentle and sensitive," his cousin said.
Maud Serrault, 37
Maud Serrault was a marketing and e-commerce director at Best Western France.
Maxime Bouffard, 26
Maxime Bouffard was a film director.
Mayeul Gaubert, 30
Mayeul Gaubert, 30, was a lawyer.
Milko Jozic, 47
Milko Jozic, 47, was an engineer from Belgium.
Mohamed Amine Ibnolmobarak, 29
A Moroccan architect and teacher, Amine Ibnolmobarak was named by the Moroccan Times newspaper as one of those killed at Le Carillon bar. The native of Rabat was with his wife who was seriously injured, the paper added.
Nathalie Jardin, 31
Nathalie Jardin was a lighting manager at the Bataclan concert hall.
Nathalie Lauraine, 39
French-Russian
Nathalie Lauraine was at the Bataclan concert with her husband, who was
injured. She was the mother of three children, according to Le Figaro
newspaper.
Nicolas Degenhardt, 37
Nicolas Degenhardt was a yoga teacher from Le Mans. He had lived in Paris for about 15 years.
Olivier Vernadal, 44
Olivier
Vernadal, 44, was a tax officer from Ceyrat in the Auvergne region of
France. A keen footballer, his home town decided to name its stadium
after him to honour his memory.
Patricia San Martin, 61
Patricia
San Martin, 61, was a civil servant working in local government at
Sevran, a northern suburb of Paris, and a trade union representative.
She died alongside her daughter Elsa Veronique Delplace, according to
Sevran town hall officials.
Pierre Innocenti, 40
Pierre
Innocenti, 40, was a manager at Chez Livio restaurant in the Parisian
suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine. He was killed alongside his cousin Stephane
Albertini. They were the third generation of their family to run the
famous restaurant.
Pierre-Antoine Henry, 36
Pierre-Antoine Henry, 36, was an engineer. His cousin said: "They killed the nicest guy in the world."
Precilia Correia, 35
A
dual Portuguese-French national, Precilia Correia was killed at the
Bataclan alongside her French boyfriend. She was an employee of music
retailer Fnac, based in La Defense in north-west Paris.
Quentin Boulenger, 29
Quentin Boulenger, 29, graduated from management school in 2010 and worked at L'Oreal cosmetics firm.
Quentin Mourier, 29
Quentin Mourier was an architect at Vergers Urbains (Urban Orchards).
Raphael Hilz, 28
Raphael
Hilz was an architect from the German city of Munich. He had been
working for the past six months for the Italian firm Renzo Piano.
Richard Rammant, 54
Richard Rammant was a motorcyclist and rock fan.
Romain Dunet, 28
Romain
Dunet was an English teacher. "He had a big heart, unwavering
generosity, and was a fantastic teacher who helped me when I needed it
most," one pupil wrote in an online tribute.
Romain Didier, 32
Romain
Didier was a former drama student and bar manager. His rugby team paid
tribute on Facebook to his "unparalled joie de vivre", adding: "It's so
hard to think that we will never again see your smile or hear your
laugh."
Romain Naufle, 31
Guitar
maker Romain Naufle was at the Bataclan with friends. He had opened a
workshop in the east of Paris. A concert was arranged in his honour.
Romain Feuillade, 31
Romain Feuillade owned a restaurant called Le Cent Kilos in the 11th district of Paris.
Salah Emad El-Gebaly, 28
Egyptian Salah Emad El-Gebaly died in the Bataclan concert hall, Egypt's consulate in Paris confirmed.
Sebastien Proisy, 37
Sebastien Proisy was a French-Bulgarian dual citizen who had just launched an international relations consultancy firm.
Stella Verry, 37
Stella Verry was a family doctor.
Stephane Albertini, 39
Stephane
Albertini was a manager of the Chez Livio restaurant in the Parisian
suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine. He was killed alongside his cousin Pierre
Innocenti. The pair "always had a smile for everyone," one customer
said.
Stephane Hache, 52
Restaurant worker Stephane Hache was killed by a stray bullet in his apartment opposite the Bataclan.
Suzon Garrigues, 21
Suzon
Garrigues was a third-year student of modern languages who "will be
remembered as the most generous, most altruistic and funniest of friends
by her fellow students, and also as an unconditional and devoted fan of
Zola", the president of the Sorbonne said.
Sven Alejandro Silva Perugini, 29
Sven
Alejandro Silva Perugini, 29, a computer scientist from Venezuela who
lived in Palma, Majorca. He had come to Paris for the weekend to catch
up with an old university friend.
Thibault Rousse Lacordaire, 36
Thibault Rousse Lacordaire worked at Colony Capital, a private equity firm.
Thierry Hardouin, 41
Thierry Hardouin was a police officer from Bobigny, a suburb in the north-east of Paris.
Thomas Ayad, 32
Thomas
Ayad from Amiens, worked for Mercury Records, a division of Universal
Music France, and was at the Bataclan with two colleagues. "He was the
coolest guy on Earth; no enemies, everyone liked him," a friend said.
Thomas Duperron, 30
Thomas Duperron was head of communications for La Maroquinerie concert hall.
Victor Munoz, 24
Victor
Munoz was born in Barcelona and built his first website aged 13. He was
a specialist in online marketing and had just graduated from business
school. He was working as an intern at a start-up when he was killed
having a drink with friends at La Belle Equipe bar.
Vincent Detoc, 38
Vincent Detoc was described as an amateur guitarist and music fan by Le Parisien newspaper, which spoke to his wife.
_________________________________________________________________________________
Source: Paris Victims, Remembered
At least 130 people were killed in terrorist attacks on Nov. 13 in the French capital. They were mostly young people,
out having fun. The victims included an architect, an American college
student, an Algerian violinist and many, many music fans. Here are some
of their stories.
Photo
Maxime Bouffard, a 26-year-old independent filmmaker, was killed Friday
when terrorists opened fire at a music venue in Paris. His sister,
Elodie Bouffard, provided the photo.
Maxime Bouffard, a longtime rugby player with a thin beard, had gone
with a friend from his university days to see the band Eagles of Death
Metal at the Bataclan concert hall when terrorists opened fire with assault rifles.
“By
the time his friend said they should get down, Maxime had taken a
bullet and was already dead,” his sister said. “He’d fallen into his
friend’s arms.”
Emmanuel Breuil first found out that his daughter, Elodie, was
attending an Eagles of Death Metal concert at the Bataclan concert hall
on Nov. 13 when his dinner was interrupted by phone calls from his sons.
Elodie, a 23-year-old design student, had gone to the concert in the 11th Arrondissement with a group of friends. She was one of two in the group who died at the Bataclan.
Photo
Christophe Foultier
Credit
Courtesy of Caroline Jolivet, via Associated Press
Christophe Foultier, 39, a husband and father, was among those killed
at the Bataclan. He was with a group of four friends and was the only
one who did not survive.
Mr. Foultier may have worked in advertising by day, but by night he was a rock musician,
working on his latest album. He was at the show with his wife, Caroline
Jolivet. “We went to our first concert together at the Bataclan,” she
said, “and a thousand more afterwards.”
Photo
Véronique Geoffroy de Bourgies, surrounded by children in Madagascar.
She and her husband adopted two children from Madagascar, who are now 12
and 15 years old.
Credit
Stéphane de Bourgies
Véronique Geoffroy de Bourgies lived in Paris but loved Madagascar,
said her husband, Stéphane de Bourgies. It was there that she adopted their two children, now 12 and 15, and to Madagascar that she dedicated the last 15 years of her life.
A
native Parisian, Ms. Geoffroy de Bourgies was the daughter of two
journalists, and a former model and journalist herself. But she quit her
job in 2005 to create Zazakely Sambatra, a nongovernmental organization that helps children in Madagascar.
Manuel Colaço Dias, a retired chauffeur, still took pleasure in
accepting the occasional driving job, and some clients continued to
request him by name. Friday, Nov. 13, was just such an occasion. An avid
soccer enthusiast, he had agreed to drive a minivan full of fans to Paris from Reims to watch France play Germany — a four-hour round trip.
Not long after dropping his clients off at the Stade de France, Mr. Dias became the sole victim of the attacks nearby.
Matthieu Giroud was a professor of geography at the University of
Marne-la-Vallée. He and his girlfriend, Aurélie Silvestre, had a
3-year-old son, Gary, and a baby girl expected in March.
He had the charisma to be the lead singer in the rock band he played with, his friends said, but he chose to play the bass — to be the quiet guy in the back.
Play Video2:26
Nohemi Gonzalez, 23, was an industrial design student at California
State University, Long Beach. She was studying abroad in Paris when she
was killed in the terrorist attacks on Nov. 13.
Credit
Video by
By ERIK OLSEN
on
Publish Date
November 25, 2015
For Nohemi Gonzalez, a bubbly and determined first-generation
Mexican-American from California, studying industrial design in Paris
was the culmination of a dream.
Photo
Hodda Saadi was the manager of La Belle Équipe.
Credit
Abdullah Saadi
Two weeks after the Nov. 13 attacks, which left 130 people dead, the
multicultural band of friends and colleagues who spent their time at La
Belle Équipe are trying to rebuild their lives. But it is a wrenching
task made all the more difficult by the fact that so many of the victims were intimately connected.
Photo
Amine Ibnolmobarak, a native of Morocco who was living in Paris, helped
found New South, an association to promote architectural and urban
research.
Credit
Pierre Seron/New South
Amine Ibnolmobarak, a native of Morocco, and his French wife, Maya Nemeta, were married about 18 months ago.
They
met as architecture students in Paris, where they stood out for their
talent and their activism, friends and former teachers said.
Mr. Ibnolmobarak was killed in the attacks, while Ms. Nemeta survived.
Photo
Pierre Innocenti, left, and Stéphane Albertini at their restaurant in Neuilly-sur-Seine, in a photo taken by Ombeline Le Gendre.
Credit
The New York Times
The cousins Pierre Innocenti and Stéphane Albertini were enjoying a rare Friday night out at the Bataclan concert hall with some friends.
Normally,
the two men, along with Mr. Innocenti’s younger brother, Charles, were
working Friday nights at a popular Italian restaurant in the Paris
suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine, which has been owned by members of their
extended family for three generations.
Photo
Guillaume Le Dramp in a photograph provided by his family.
Guillaume Le Dramp had taken the night off
from his job to attend a birthday party at La Belle Équipe bistro. He
died there, along with 18 others. His friends described him as a bon
vivant with a sharp wit and a wry sense of humor.
Play Video2:08
Matthieu Mauduit lost his brother, Cédric, in the terrorist attack on
the Bataclan on Nov. 13. Now he has an unconventional plan to honor his
memory.
Credit
Video by
By SPENCER WOLFF and YASMINE CANGA-VALLES
on
Publish Date
November 24, 2015
Cédric Mauduit lived for rock ’n’ roll and Clint Eastwood movies.
On Nov. 13, he headed from his home in Lower Normandy to Paris to see
the Eagles of Death Metal — one more rock ’n’ roll road trip in a
lifetime of them. He was surrounded by four close friends when the
assailants started shooting.
He was a financial auditor and
father of two, and his passion for music had led him to open a small
concert venue, Le Normandy, near his hometown in a building that housed a
carousel from 1810. It still hosts festivals and performances by
independent musicians.
Of the 130 people killed in the Paris attacks, most died at the Bataclan concert hall. Hélène Muyal-Leiris, a wife and the mother of a young son, had been attending the rock concert there.
After
her death, her husband, Antoine Leiris, posted a tribute to his wife on
Facebook, saying he would not allow his grief to turn into hatred.
Photo
Kheir Eddine Sahbi in 2009 at a rehearsal in Algeria.
Credit
Meriem Laribi
Kheir Eddine Sahbi, or “Didine,” as his family called him, was
returning home when he was struck by a bullet in front of the Casa
Nostra restaurant on Nov. 13. A violinist from Algeria, he had been in France for only a year, pursuing music. He was finishing a degree in ethnomusicology at Sorbonne University.
Photo
A portrait of Fabian Stech, created by Romano Rossi, a former student at
the school in Dijon, France, where Mr. Stech taught German.
Credit
Romano Rossi
Fabian Stech, a critic and teacher at a private school in Dijon,
France, was a regular at exhibitions and art fairs throughout Europe. On
Nov. 13, he was in Paris to see the Eagles of Death Metal at the
Bataclan. Mr. Stech lost his life after gunmen stormed into the venue and fired into the crowd. Mr. Stech was the second German known to have died in the Paris attacks.
A graphic designer from the Paris suburb of Clichy, Éric Thomé was an effusive rock and electronic music fan
who enjoyed discovering new artists and songs, friends said. He died,
along with more than 80 other music fans, in the attack on the Bataclan.
He was also a film buff and a self-taught photographer whose images had recently begun to attract critical attention.
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