by Nomad

A look at one of the victims of the Paris terrorist attacks and how his life connects three cultures.
That attack was connected with earlier carnage on the offices of a satirical magazine which left 12 people dead and 11 others wounded.
When terrorist
Amedy Coulibaly stormed into the suburban market, he knew only that it was a Jewish-owned. That was enough of a target as far as he was concerned. In his mind, as in the minds of all terrorists, his victims had no families, no friends, and no histories.
So. like the priest in
The Bridge of San Louis Rey, I wanted to take a moment to look at the life and the death of this stranger who became a victim.
The most tragic aspect of the supermarket attacks- as with terrorism in general- was its random nature. The fact that location was a target was random. The victims too were random. The only real linkage, from the attackers' point of view, was that the workers and the customers were most likely to be Jewish.
In Hattab's case, that's only half of the story. This 21-year-old man was not French but from the predominantly Muslim
Tunisia. He had been living in Paris while completing his graduate degree in international business studies. He was clearly not afraid of life and was preparing himself for an interesting productive life.
Moshe Uzan, a 25-year-old friend, told one reporter that Yoav's character set him apart."There are those who stand back and watch their lives. But he, he played an active role."