Paris // Lassana Bathily was an undocumented migrant from Mali until he became an unlikely hero by saving shoppers’ lives during a terror attack on a Jewish supermarket in Paris a year ago.
The 25-year-old became the one positive story to emerge from the three days of violence in January, when extremists attacks on the Charlie Hebdo satirical weekly, police and the Hyper Cacher supermarket in the east of the capital killed a total of 17 people.
“Ah, here is my favourite Frenchman,” cried president Francois Hollande when he received Mr Bathily at the Elysee Palace a fortnight after the carnage.
A shelf-stacker in the supermarket, Mr Bathily helped save shoppers when gunman Amedy Coulibaly burst in on January 9.
The narrative of a Muslim saving Jews from an extremist made him a positive symbol of France’s diversity.
But as he writes in his book I’m Not a Hero, to be published on Wednesday, heroism has been an uncomfortable mantle.
“The next morning, I turned on Facebook and 800 people had asked to be my friend,” Mr Bathily said.
“In the days that followed I said ‘No, I’m not a hero’. I did something that had to be done.”
Mr Bathily was just a few minutes from the end of his shift at the supermarket, unpacking frozen items in the basement, when he heard gunfire upstairs and saw about a dozen people fleeing down the stairs.
Coulibaly, who claimed he was working in the name of ISIL, had taken several shoppers hostage upstairs and ordered a cashier to go round up the others.
Some of those who were huddled downstairs obeyed, but others refused to go and Mr Bathily urged them to use the goods elevator to escape.
When no one wanted to take the risk, he ushered them into the refrigerated storage room, flicking off the light and the motor, and then made his own escape via the elevator and a fire escape.
“My heart was beating so hard that I was scared I’d be heard,” he said.
Once outside, he helped police to sketch out the layout of the shop and prepare their raid. A few hours later, they stormed in and shot Coulibaly dead.
Some say Mr Bathily’s role was exaggerated by media and officials hungry for a good news angle.
“The media and officials wanted to paint this pretty picture, that he helped us escape downstairs, that he hid us, and so on. Which wasn’t really true, but that’s not Lassana’s fault – at that moment, we needed a hero,” one of the former hostages later told the Liberation newspaper.
Mr Bathily is not bothered by the backlash.
“If they now say that I didn’t do anything for them, that’s their problem. I won’t play their game,” he said.
Several days after the violence, he was granted French citizenship by the president himself, something he says had been a dream since his childhood in a small village on the Mali-Senegal border.
But he was passed over for the Legion d’Honneur, France’s highest award, according to nominations published on Friday.
Mr Bathily returned to a hero’s welcome in Mali, where he was offered free stays at top hotels and was received by president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.
He has set up an aid group to provide basic facilities in his village, which he left aged 16 to seek work in Paris.
But he has also had trauma to overcome. He lost close friend and colleague Yohan Cohen – one of the four killed by Coulibaly that day – and just a few days later, he heard that his younger brother Boubakar had died from a longstanding illness.
Moreover, deadly reminders of the terrorist threat seem to have dogged his life.
Mr Bathily was just 300 metres away from the Bataclan theatre in Paris when it was attacked on November 13.
“I ran like everyone else. But I was stuck in the neighbourhood. I didn’t get home until 5am,” he said.
Just a week later,extremists attacked the Radisson Blu Hotel in the Malian capital of Bamako – one of the hotels he had stayed in during his recent visits.
He remains sanguine: “It’s not the terrorists who can kill me – if God decides that I will die, I will die, it’s not they who will decide.”
The media circus has had its benefits – Mr Bathily was given new social housing and a job at the Paris town hall.
He is studying and dreams of becoming a teacher.
“I just continue to live, I continue to do what I did before,” he said. “We must show solidarity, we must stay united. There is hope.”
* Agence France-Presse
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