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Joie de vivre: Students decide to stay or leave Paris after attacks

Of the UVA students studying abroad in Paris this past semester, one says a significant number elected to finish their school work electronically from domestic soil after the November 13 terrorist attacks in which 130 people were killed.

Former C-VILLE intern Kathleen Smith, receiving credit in Paris through the Institute for International Education of Students, was among the UVA students who eventually got a plane ticket home. During the attacks, she says she was on fall break and vacationing in Prague. Smith was having dinner with a group of friends in her IES program when she received a CNN update on her phone that said a shooting had just taken place at Le Petit Cambodge.

“I was particularly concerned since it was a restaurant where I had eaten before and actually recommended to friends visiting Paris that weekend,” she wrote in an e-mail.

Smith says it didn’t take long to realize the gravity of the situation—within the hour news outlets began reporting the bombings at Stade de France and the shootings at Le Bataclan and other restaurants.

“Luckily, most of my friends were out of Paris,” she says, “but it was an extremely surreal and scary experience trying to locate those who weren’t.”

It was impossible to sleep on the night of the attacks, Smith says, adding that her “thumb was sore from refreshing news websites so frequently.”

The week following the events, she says that while Parisians were grief-stricken, they were adamant about maintaining their “joie de vivre”—or exuberant enjoyment of life—by eating out on terraces, making themselves present in the city and paying their respects at the sites of the attacks. On Wednesday following the incidents, Smith says French police staged a raid near Saint-Denis, right outside Paris, and found plans for a future attack. Two suspected terrorists were killed and eight were taken into custody.

“Following the raids, the tide definitely changed in terms of my experience in Paris,” she says. Wednesday classes were canceled, and a significant number of students in the IES program started making plans to go back to America. She estimates that six people in the program were from UVA.

Initially, going home seemed drastic, Smith says. But after receiving several e-mails from the U.S. Embassy advising students to avoid restaurants, shopping malls, theaters, airports, public transportation and other venues, leaving started to make sense. Immediately following the initial attacks, she says UVA contacted IES administration to determine if it was possible for students to complete the program from home.

“I would be lying if I said I wasn’t scared when I left the comfort of my apartment in the residential 14th arrondissement,” she says. “The thing that was most jarring is that the attack sites were all places people my age would go.” Soccer stadiums, trendy restaurants and concert halls were among the mix. Everywhere she went, Smith says she was plagued with thoughts such as, “Is this a dangerous spot?” or “Could this be a target?”

Smith left Paris at the end of November and is finishing her semester at home in Louisville, Kentucky.

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Paris terror touches home

UVA Darden professor June West was in Washington, D.C., last Friday evening, and saw a news crawl on CNN about attacks in Paris.

“I said, ‘Oh my gosh.’ I immediately texted my son.”

Her son, Benjamin West, has lived in Paris for 14 years.

“They were at a party,” she says. “They couldn’t get home because the Metro was locked down.”

She’s talked to Benjamin every day since the attacks. “They are in shock,” she says. “The way Parisians handle these events is they march in solidarity.” In this case, President François Hollande did not want people on the streets.

“I think the magnitude of this particular attack is sinking in for him and his friends,” says West. “As much as they want things to get back to normal, that wasn’t possible this weekend.” Most shops were closed and there were very few people on the street, she says.

Nor was starting the work week normal. “Ben’s building had metal detectors, which is new,” says West.

“The City of Lights is in a sad state,” writes Benjamin in an e-mail. “Since Saturday, Paris has seen an influx of armed military to ensure our safety and that of the city’s monuments. In addition, the government announced that citizens should avoid public areas, but the French refuse to give up their liberty. The terraces of Parisian cafés are full of those who will not give in to fear, with the belief that we show our solidarity and honor the victims by continuing to live our lives as before.”

“I keep thinking about that young woman from California, realizing her dream of studying design and going to Paris, sitting at a cafe,” says June West. “That’s what you do in Paris.

“Whenever I’m there, it’s laughing and talking. To have it become a killing field is beyond words. It could be any of us.”