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Paris Marks 10 Years Since the 13‑November Attacks With Site Tributes and a New Memorial Garden

Officials emphasize lasting trauma alongside a threat that has shifted toward younger, self‑radicalized actors.

Overview

  • Ceremonies are being held at the Stade de France, across the targeted terraces, and at the Bataclan, with President Emmanuel Macron paying respects alongside victims’ families and associations.
  • The Jardin mémoriel du 13‑Novembre in front of Paris City Hall is being inaugurated at 6 p.m., closed to the public but broadcast live on TF1 and France 2 and on a giant screen at Place de la République.
  • The city invited residents to public moments of remembrance at Place de la République, with the names of the 132 dead honored across events marking the anniversary.
  • Life for Paris, a survivors’ association, is formally dissolving on 13 November, a decision its president Arthur Dénouveaux frames as avoiding a permanent identity as victims.
  • Research and security briefings report enduring effects and an evolving risk, with a Crédoc survey finding 56% feel permanent insecurity and the DGSI citing 79 foiled plots since 2015, including six in 2025, as authorities track more minors and lone‑actor radicalization.