On the night of Friday, November 13 to Saturday, November 14, 2015, it was the whole of France that was attacked full force. Several shootings erupted almost simultaneously in the center of Paris and its near suburb: around the Stade de France and the terrace of bars and restaurants of the Xth and XIth arrondissements. Not far from there, the shooters also broke into the Bataclan concert hall, making the spectators, their hostages for tens of minutes. These attacks, claimed by the Islamic state, are the most violent that France has so far known: suicide bombers (three near the Stade de France and at least one in the Bataclan) have blown up the explosive belts that barded their bodies. Since Friday night and the beginning of these tragic events, the number of victims has steadily increased: at least 132 people have died, hundreds (more than 300) have been injured and several dozens are still "in a absolute state of emergency ".

These scenes of war and terror have obviously marked the French and the Parisians but also the whole world. Many heads of state and government representatives spoke to express their support. Barack Obama and David Cameron spoke in French for the occasion. From the Sydney Opera House to the Corcovado of Rio , through the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem , the Shanghai Tower or San Francisco City Hall, many monuments have been lit with blue, white and red throughout along the weekend.

After the attacks of Charlie Hebdo and the Hyper Casher that took place last January, thousands of anonymous people have supported the victims, the families of the victims and the French people. Messages of love and peace flooded the social networks and images of the news.

Many designers, known and less known, also took the pencil to exteriorize grief and pain. Soledad Bravi , Plantu , Hervé Baudry , Frédéric Poullet , Jean Jullien ... We have gathered inside this slideshow some drawings born of a spontaneous solidarity.