By Elissa Darwish
PARIS (Reuters) -Sebastien Lascoux was absorbed in the music when three Islamist militants burst into the Bataclan concert hall in Paris and opened fire on the crowd, killing 90 people including one of his friends.
A decade on, he is still haunted by everything he saw and heard that night of November 13, 2015. He can’t go to crowded places or enclosed spaces, even cinemas. Loud noises remind him of gunshots.
“I had to relearn how to interpret all the sounds around me – the noises of the street, any sudden sound that makes you jump,” he said.
“A part of me died that night and stayed in the Bataclan.”
‘WOUNDED CITY’
The assault on the concert hall was the deadliest of a burst of coordinated attacks on the French capital that night which killed a total of 130 people an

104FM WIKY

America News
Raw Story
Cover Media
Associated Press US News
Law & Crime
New York Post
CNN