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Bastille Day -2016- Apr 2026

We do not forget.

At first, there was confusion. The truck was moving slowly, weaving slightly. Some thought it was a drunk driver. Others thought it was a mechanical failure. A man named Samir, a cigarette dangling from his lip, saw the grille of the truck approaching and dove over a low wall into a planter of oleander. He was the first to understand.

The next morning, the sun rose again over the Baie des Anges. It was mercilessly bright, the same generous light that had shone the day before. But the Promenade des Anglais was a ghost. The only sound was the rhythmic lapping of the waves against the rocks below—the same indifferent, eternal sea.

And on the railings, tied to lampposts, pinned to the plane trees, flowers began to appear. Not official wreaths, but single roses, wilting tulips, sunflowers. And candles, thousands of them, their flames trembling in the morning breeze. Beside them, handwritten notes in childish script: “Pourquoi?” and “On n’oublie pas.” Bastille Day -2016-

At 22:34, a white 19-ton Renault Midlum truck turned onto the Promenade from the Boulevard de Lorraine. It did not stop at the pedestrian crossing. It did not turn toward the sea. It aimed straight down the center of the crowded boulevard.

The driver floored the accelerator.

For nearly two kilometers—the length of twenty football fields—the truck plowed through the crowd. The driver, a 31-year-old Tunisian man named Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, leaned out the window and fired a pistol several times, adding the crack of gunfire to the chaos. Police officers on motorcycles gave chase, their sirens a futile, wailing chorus behind the beast. We do not forget

In the hours that followed, the blue-white lights of ambulances and gendarmerie vans painted the palm trees in stroboscopic flashes. The bodies were laid in rows, covered in white sheets, like a terrible laundry left out by the tide. On the ground, scattered among the shards of glass and pools of blood, were the relics of a summer evening: a tiny sparkler, a melted ice cream cone, a single child’s sandal.

The white grille became a battering ram. The headlights, two dead eyes, swept over a panicked tide of humanity. People scattered, but there was nowhere to go—the Promenade is flanked on one side by the sea wall, a three-meter drop to the rocks, and on the other by hotels and restaurants with locked gates. It became a corridor of horror.

Finally, near the Palais de la Méditerranée, a small group of officers caught up. They fired through the windshield. The truck lurched, slowed, and stopped. The driver was killed in the exchange. But the silence that followed was more terrible than the noise. It was the silence of a city holding its breath, of a seaside promenade turned into a slaughterhouse. Some thought it was a drunk driver

That was Bastille Day. Not the celebration of liberty, equality, and fraternity, but the night a white truck turned a holiday promenade into a battlefield. It was the moment the sweet sugar of a chichi turned to ash on the tongue. It was the summer the French Riviera learned that the devil does not need a bomb—just a steering wheel, a rented truck, and a long, straight road full of innocent people heading home.

The truck did not stop. It zigzagged, chasing the fleeing. It crushed a baby stroller, then a bicycle, then a man who had just called his wife to say he was on his way home. The screams—a sound witnesses would later describe as an animal, high-pitched, inhuman—rose above the still-smoky air. The front of the truck, once white, was now a gruesome collage of metal and flesh. The tires left not tracks, but smears.

It was a night for liberté , for the simple, fierce joy of being alive and French, or simply being human on a beautiful coast. Families were out: fathers with toddlers on their shoulders, teenagers with sparklers, old couples holding hands on benches. The annual fireworks display, set to launch from the sea, was the crown jewel of the evening. People craned their necks, phones held high, waiting for the first red, white, and blue starburst.

The evening of July 14, 2016, began with the specific, shimmering generosity of the French Riviera. The sun, a soft orange coin, was melting into the Mediterranean, leaving the sky streaked with lavender and gold. Nice, the city of angels, was dressed in its holiday best. Tricolores hung from every balcony, fluttering in the warm sea breeze. On the Promenade des Anglais, the air tasted of salt, grilled merguez, and the sweet, powdery sugar of chichis —the local doughnuts eaten by the ton on Bastille Day.