Hollande visits main Paris mosque, a year after Charlie Hebdo attack
The president had a short conversation and a moment of friendship and fraternity over a cup of tea
PARIS:
French President Francois Hollande made an unannounced visit to the main mosque in Paris on Sunday, a year after extremist attacks in the French capital.
"The president had a short conversation and a moment of friendship and fraternity over a cup of tea," a French presidency official said.
Hundreds of French mosques open their doors to the public
Earlier, Hollande attended a low-key event to mark a year since 1.5 million people thronged Paris in a show of unity following the shootings at Charlie Hebdo newspaper and a Jewish supermarket.
One year on, France remembers victims killed at kosher supermarket
Mosques across France opened their doors to the public this weekend in a bid by the Muslim community to build bridges following a series of jihadist attacks that rocked France in 2015.
French President Francois Hollande made an unannounced visit to the main mosque in Paris on Sunday, a year after extremist attacks in the French capital.
"The president had a short conversation and a moment of friendship and fraternity over a cup of tea," a French presidency official said.
Hundreds of French mosques open their doors to the public
Earlier, Hollande attended a low-key event to mark a year since 1.5 million people thronged Paris in a show of unity following the shootings at Charlie Hebdo newspaper and a Jewish supermarket.
One year on, France remembers victims killed at kosher supermarket
Mosques across France opened their doors to the public this weekend in a bid by the Muslim community to build bridges following a series of jihadist attacks that rocked France in 2015.