PARIS -- Those slain by Islamic State group gunmen and suicide bombers in Paris were fondly remembered Thursday as France commemorated the coordinated Nov. 13, 2015, assaults that killed 132 people and wounded hundreds more.
With minutes of silence and somber readings of the 132 victims' names, the French capital mourned the dead and innocence it lost on Nov. 13, 2015, but also proudly recalled how Parisians came together, looked after each other and slowly but surely rebounded in the wake of the three-hour series of coordinated assaults targeting the packed Bataclan concert hall, joyful cafés and the national stadium where France's soccer team was playing.
The bloodshed was France's deadliest in peacetime -- a national trauma likened to 9/11. The night hardened France's security reflexe

Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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