Sophie Dias fought tears outside the Stade de France on Thursday as she described her “void that never closes” since her father became the first person killed in France’s deadliest peacetime attack — a night of terrorism a decade ago that still scars Paris and shapes the country.

The coordinated assaults on Nov. 13, 2015 turned the French capital into a theater of blood and calamity: gunfire on café terraces, explosions at a stadium, a massacre at the Bataclan concert hall. Many in France and abroad have described the attacks as the country’s 9/11. Advertisement

The attacks killed 132 people, including two survivors who later died by suicide, and hundreds more were wounded. The night hardened France’s security reflexes while deepening a sense of solidarity that has endured a decade late

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