Paris - Halima Saadi Ndiaye was celebrating her 36th birthday in a cafe where her brother worked when terror took over. Within a minute, she was dead. Within hours, her sister Hodda was, too. Her brother Khaled tried in vain to save them along with friends and other cafe patrons.
The memory tortures him, along with worry about the future of his neighborhood, a place proud of its diversity and tolerance.
French-born siblings with Tunisian roots and family in Senegal, the Saadis embody that ideal. After Friday’s attacks by Islamic extremists, they now worry about a backlash against Muslims and other minorities, moderate or otherwise.
The cafe’s majority shareholder, Gregory Reibenberg, is Jewish, and a friend of Saadi’s family. Reibenberg lost his wife in the attack, and he and Saadi marched together over the weekend in memory of their lost loved ones.... Read More: VIN