PARIS (AP) — Sophie Dias fought back tears outside the Stade de France Thursday as she described living with what she called “a void that never closes” since the night her father became the first person killed in France’s deadliest peacetime attack -- a night that still scars Paris and shapes the country a decade on.

On Nov. 13, 2015 — 10 years ago to the day — coordinated terrorist assaults 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 since described the attacks as the country’s 9/11.

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