Gwladys Laffitte edited by Solène Delinger 5:22 p.m., September 18, 2021, modified at 5:25 p.m., September 18, 2021

On the night of November 13, Sébastien was in the Bataclan pit to attend the Eagles of Death Metal concert.

Taken hostage by the jihadists for more than two hours, he escaped physically unharmed.

Almost six years after the attacks, the November 13 trial allows her to restore order to her memories.

Testimony at the microphone of Gwladys Laffitte for Europe 1. 

TESTIMONY

The trial of the November 13 attacks continues.

The day of Friday, September 17 was devoted to the description of the crime scenes at the Bataclan, where 90 people died from gunfire.

A particularly trying hearing for the survivors who insisted on being present, like Sébastien.

Having left the Bataclan alive, he wanted to be present to remember the facts.

He testifies at the microphone of Gwladys Laffitte for Europe 1. 

"I spent the night of November 13 fleeing the bullets"

"I came to hear the facts, just the facts. I feel like I don't have too many memories," he says.

"I spent the night of November 13 fleeing, trying to be out of bullets. I think I did well to act like that that night because I just found out that the The part in which I was, the false right, was the one where there was the most accumulation of bodies, where there were the most important mutilations ".

A "work of memory"

Sébastien, one of the last survivors on the spot, was taken hostage for more than two hours by the jihadist commando. "I escaped death several times", he remembers at the microphone of Gwladys Laffitte. "That's why I still wanted to come back and really hear what had happened in the room, when I was hostage. I needed to have a precise vision of what I escaped from." . And to conclude: "The hardest part was getting out of there and once you're alive, you can't say it's hard to attend a re-enactment. On the contrary, it's a work of memory, and that's what the trial is for.