A gray sky.
Cold.
Wet sidewalks.
And above all a lead screed above the Fénelon Sainte-Marie school group, in the 8th arrondissement of Paris.
The weather has nothing to do with it but, for almost a month, students no longer have the heart to smile when they leave class.
“The announcement was too sudden, we still don’t realize it,” sighs one of the students who leaves his establishment, bundled up in his coat.
He studies in the class of one of the two prep students who died at the end of January.
A support unit was immediately set up within this prestigious teaching route.
Since the start of the February holidays, a psychologist has remained available on site one evening a week.
“We are going to continue this monitoring, even next year,” announces François Combescure, the general director of Fénelon Sainte-Marie.
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