A week later, Parisians still in shock over deadly attack

PARIS -- Cold rain extinguished the flickering candles and drenched the packets of flowers outside the Paris attacks sites Friday, but people came anyway - to pay tribute, to mourn, to reflect on their city's losses one week later.

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With France under a state of emergency, most demonstrations and large gatherings have been banned in Paris since the Nov. 13 attacks that shattered a joyful night out. A gathering Friday at France's oldest mosque to show inter-community solidarity was canceled because of security fears.

But Parisians spontaneously came together outside the restaurants, cafes and concert hall hit in the attacks - as they have all week - to leave flowers, light candles or hold quiet vigils.

"I'm still reeling because these are the neighborhoods where we young people go out a lot, places we know well," student Sophie Garcon said as she looked at tributes left outside the Le Carillon bar, where gunmen sprayed automatic weapons fire.

In all, 130 people died and more than 350 were injured when gunmen and suicide bombers attacked cafes and restaurants in Paris and the national soccer stadium. The attacks, claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, were the deadliest violence in decades and have left the city profoundly shaken.

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The army has deployed 6,500 soldiers to the Paris region to help protect streets, train stations and landmark tourist sites like the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre Museum.

"There's a feeling of insecurity, even though there are police everywhere," Garcon said. "In France, we have a tendency to think that we're not a country at war because there's not a war on our territory. But France is at war elsewhere in the world ... and now it's here, in the city of Paris."

Khaled and Abdallah Saadi, the brothers of two sisters killed at the Belle Equipe bar, were among the mourners paying their respects there Friday. Sisters Halima and Hodda Saadi were celebrating Halima's 36th birthday with friends and family when the gunmen struck, killing 11 people.

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The city's mood was subdued Friday, the weather wet and grim. But French artists and cultural figures urged people to respond to the tragedy with an outpouring of "noise and light."

Dozens of artists, writers, musicians and other cultural figures, including singer Charles Aznavour, journalist Anne Sinclair and former French Culture Minister Jack Lang, urged people to turn on their lights, light candles and play music exactly at 9:20 p.m., the time the attacks began on Nov. 13.

In a published letter, they said the killers' attack on "culture and freedom" should unite people of all races, faiths and backgrounds. They hoped the gesture would show "that culture will continue to shine out and to burnish the light of hope and fraternity."

That hope is echoed in many of the handwritten signs and notes left outside the attack sites: defiant messages of love, vows that the slaughter will not turn Parisians toward hatred and suspicion.

At Le Carillon, a note posted on the wall by the bar's owners offered "profound condolences" to those who lost loved ones, thanked people for their support and urged unity.

"Courage to you all. Let's stay united in sorrow, but also in hope for happier - and always fraternal - days," it said.

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