Thursday, November 13, 2025

Ten years ago today, the Paris massacres still horrify us

 

On November 13, 2015, a series of terrorist attacks took place in Paris, France.  Nine attackers, assisted by a tenth who escaped, used suicide bombs and assault rifles to strike a stadium, several restaurants, and the Bataclan theater.  137 victims died, most at the Bataclan, with a further 416 injured.

The echoes of the attacks continue to this day.  France commemorated them with public memorial services and other functions;  extremist Muslim terrorist groups celebrated them with paeans of praise to the "martyrs" who carried them out.  They are, in a sense, France's equivalent to the attacks of September 11, 2001 in the United States:  a landmark in our history that will never be forgotten.

As was only to be expected, the attacks inspired a wave of anti-Muslim rhetoric in France and elsewhere, and also inspired would-be fundamentalist terrorists to intensify their efforts.  Incidents like this always do that - they make the extremes more extreme, whilst driving most of society from the center towards those extremes.  The day after the attacks, I wrote:


The terrorists haven't thought about it, I'm sure, but they're going to produce a similar and even greater tragedy for their own people than they've inflicted on France.  The reaction from ordinary people like you and I won't be to truly think about the tragedy, to realize that the perpetrators were a very small minority of those who shared their faith, extremists who deserve the ultimate penalty as soon as it can be administered.  No.  The ordinary man and woman on the streets of France is going to wake up today hating all Muslims.  He or she will blame them all for the actions of a few, and will react to all of them as if they were all equally guilty.

One can't blame people for such attitudes.  When one simply can't tell whether or not an individual Muslim is also a terrorist fundamentalist, the only safety lies in treating all of them as if they presented that danger.  That's what the French people are going to do now.  That's what ordinary people all across Europe are going to do now, irrespective of whatever their politicians tell them.  Their politicians are protected in secure premises by armed guards.  They aren't.  Their survival is of more immediate concern;  so they're doing to do whatever they have to do to improve the odds in their favor.  If that means ostracizing Muslims, ghettoizing them, even using preemptive violence against them to force them off the streets . . . they're going to do it.

I've written before about how blaming all Muslims for the actions of a few is disingenuous and inexcusable.  I still believe that . . . but events have overtaken rationality.  People are going to start relating to 'Muslims' rather than to 'human beings', just as the extremists label all non-Muslims as 'kaffirs' or 'kufars' - unbelievers - rather than as human beings.  For the average man in a European street, a Muslim will no longer be a 'person'.  He's simply a Muslim, a label, a 'thing'.  He's no longer French, or American, or British, no matter what his passport says.  He's an 'other'.  He's 'one of them' . . . and because of that, he's no longer 'one of us'.  He's automatically defined - no, let's rather say (because it's easier to blame him) that he's defined himself - as a potential threat, merely by the religion he espouses.  He may have been born into it, and raised in a family and society and culture so saturated with it as to make it literally impossible, inconceivable, for him to be anything else . . . but that doesn't matter.  It's his choice to be Muslim, therefore he must take the consequences.  We're going to treat him with the same suspicion and exaggerated caution that we would a live, possibly armed hand-grenade.  He's asked for it, so we're going to give it to him.

That's the bitter fruit that extremism always produces.  It's done so throughout history.  There are innumerable examples of how enemies have become 'things'.  It's Crusaders versus Saracens, Cavaliers versus Roundheads, Yankees versus Rebels, doughboys versus Krauts . . . us versus them, for varying values of 'us' and 'them'.

. . .

And in the end, the bodies lying in the ruins, and the blood dripping onto our streets, and the weeping of those who've lost loved ones . . . they'll all be the same.  History is full of them.  When it comes to the crunch, there are no labels that can disguise human anguish.  People will suffer in every land, in every community, in every faith . . . and they'll turn to what they believe in to make sense of their suffering . . . and most of them will raise up the next generation to hate those whom they identify as the cause of their suffering . . . and the cycle will go on, for ever and ever, until the world ends.


There's more at the link.

And, sure enough, the cycle of the Paris attacks has produced yet more bitter fruit.  The BBC reports:


A former girlfriend of the only jihadist to survive the November 2015 attacks has been arrested on suspicion of plotting her own violent act.

The woman - a 27 year-old French convert to Islam named as Maëva B - began a letter-writing relationship with Salah Abdeslam, 36, who is serving a life sentence in jail near the Belgian border following his conviction in 2022.

When prison guards discovered that Abdeslam had been using a USB key containing jihadist propaganda, they traced its origin to face-to-face meetings that the prisoner had with Maëva B.

. . .

With France commemorating 10 years since the worst attack in its modern history, the arrest has focused minds on the enemy that never went away.

Six plots have been thwarted this year, says Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez, and the threat level remains high.


Again, more at the link.

Say a prayer today for those who died in Paris that day, and their survivors, who live with the burden of their loss.  Pray, too, for those who work day and night to protect us against more such attacks.

Peter


15 comments:

Michael said...

Peter maybe you should read their Holy Book the Quran.

The Muslims that don't subdue the infidel are deemed BAD Muslims and are to be slaughtered for failing their duties to Islam.

Qualitarian said...

Muslims wouldn’t be much of a problem if they weren’t where they don’t belong. Muslims wouldn’t face suspicion if they weren’t where they don’t belong. Mean bigoted Christians wouldn’t hurt the feelings of the poor misunderstood darlings… if the Muslims weren’t where they don’t belong.

Peter said...

Michael, I've read and re-read the Koran over many years. I've worked with Muslims of all persuasions, from fundamentalist terrorists (as a prison chaplain) to those helping in natural and other disasters (Gift of the Givers and other organizations). I daresay I know a lot more about Islam than most of my readers - and I'm appalled at the lack of understanding most of them display. That's why I wrote that post in 2015, to try to open people's eyes to the reality of the situation. It's not just Muslims who are fundamentalists.

ruralcounsel said...

I struggle with whether or not Islam is a religion at all.

Its doctrines seem more suited to a berserker death cult that is incompatible with Western culture and principles. It's more akin to the mongol hordes than a religion. The few religious aspects it flaunts to the world seem more like elaborate camouflage.

Don C. said...

It's a good thing that Chuck the Hammer didn't just accept the invasion of his land by the Moslems in 732 AD. We might be speaking Arabic instead of English.

Of course, there was an easily identifiable army that invaded his land in 732, not thousands of individuals welcomed in by the French, at various times for "peaceful" purposes.

Beans said...

I would agree with you but where are the hordes of muslims speaking out against the violence? Where are the moderates pointing at the radicals and saying, "They're a problem and we don't believe in what they do."

Tacit approval and non-condemnation of the 'radicals' is fueling the radicals. I don't see moderate muslims stomping the snot out of the radicals. Do you?

On the other hand, I remember most Christians here in the US of A protesting and condemning the actions of the Westboro Baptist Church. And the KKK. And the Snake Handlers.

So where is the widespread condemnation of radicals by mainstream muslims? Hmmm???

Don C. said...

Islam is not just a religion. It has social, political, economic, educational, religious, military and legal components. The religious component is a cover for all of the others. It has never surrendered to democratic principles, since democracy, where one thinks for oneself, is the opposite of islam (small 'i').

Dan said...

It's amazing we haven't had more incidents of this size and nature. And given the fact that almost every major country allows these raghead terrorists freedom to roam about at will it's an absolute certainty that sooner or later this even Will be repeated...and expanded on.

Michael said...

Peter then you know about
Deception, Lying
and Taqiyya
Does Islam permit Muslims to lie?

Muslim scholars teach that Muslims should generally be truthful to each other... unless the purpose of lying is to "smooth over differences" or "gain the upper-hand over an enemy."
There are several forms of lying to non-believers that are permitted under certain circumstances, the best known being taqiyya (the Shia name). These circumstances are typically those that advance the cause of Islam - in some cases by gaining the trust of non-believers in order to draw out their vulnerability and defeat them.

I could do a line by line Quran post if you like.

Or I could point out that REAL LIFE actions of far too many of them in merry ole England, Germany and so on has shown them Incompatible with western lifestyle as they DEMAND WE COMFORM TO THEIR Laws.

They WANTED something from the Prison Chaplin.

I too have worked in Muslim countries in missionary work, most were quite kind and generous folks.

Most Pitbulls are the kindest dogs you can know. More than a few make it known as a dangerous breed.

David Davies said...

Not all Germans were Nazis. That didn’t save them from the ministrations of the 8th Air Force.

FAFO. Declare that you are at war with someone and then actually attack them. You are responsible for all the death and destruction which follows, and for the hatred directed at your people.

LL said...

How does the condition of the French economy welcome the same sort of attack again. Muslim unemployment in France hovers at 60 percent (military age Muslim males) and they're not about to return to their native lands. To be frank, who would employ them even if the economy was good?

Old NFO said...

Yet even today, 10 years on, there are STILL large Muslim enclaves in Paris and other cities that are no go for cops... sigh

Anonymous said...

Pushback against the radicals happens. See the events known as Black September, the anti-ISIS coalition, and post-Quaddafi Libya.

Anonymous said...

Don't know Peter... One can find redemptive traits in most religions just like most people. Piecemeal redemption isn't wholly redemptive, especially when it comes to your soul on judgement day. I do think Islam gives threads to pull to bring to Christ but that's not the same as it appears you're saying...

And as a questioning Christian (about faith & shared beleifs and paths to salvation generally, not Re: Jesus or Christianity's supremacy) who has studied most prominent religions including Islam, I'm pretty much at a point in middle age where I think Islam is worshipping the dark side, specifically B--l. You can be "virturous" in serving a false prophet, but you're still going down the wrong, blasphemous path -- and as the saying goes the road to hell was paved with good intentions.
*And to be clear, I think a lot of modern Christian sects and nondenominational churches (eg, prosperity gospel) do the same...

Ultimately, if you were to ask me to pick the 3 most truthful or insightful religions -- I'd say Christianity is the only path to true salvation, Taoism certainly has some insights and moral codes that reinforce but are distinct from the former (primarily the connected nature of everything and the cyclical reality of that), and paganism/Native American religions (two sides of same coin IMO) tell us more about the reality of this world and connected dimensions than is overt in the Bible (but I think a lot of it is included in both the old and new but missed in mainstream Christian teachings/understandings, but nevertheless the paganism and indigenous religions are largely if not wholly irrelevant to salvation). Catholics and their exorcisms certainly speak to this broader world.
And to be clear, not saying either of the latter (Taoism and the othet two) is wholly of Christ, as I don't believe that.

As always, YMMV.

Tsgt Joe said...

In America we have at least given lip service to the idea that we are a “melting pot” when at best we are a lumpy stew. We can get a diverse group of northern europeans together without too much bloodshed these days but look at more disparate groups like orientals, hispanics and blacks. We are struggling with that. Having lived and worked around Detroit most of my life, I’ve concluded that the moslems dont want to be assimilated. I am aware that none of these groups are monolithic and have major differences. As an Iranian(persian) guy told me once; I know nothing about the guy (syrian arab) who runs the gas station down on the corner. We could argue about whether Islam is a religion or something else but it does seem to have more influence over them than Christianity does us. I dont believe that Christians and Moslems can live side by side with each other in peace and equality for long.