Emma Parkinson shares a terrifying story of survival on 60 Minutes.
When Australian teenager Emma Parkinson purchased last-minute tickets to a sold out gig on Friday the 13th November in Paris, she thought she’d lucked out. Little did she know, she’d just bought her way into one of the most horrific terrorist attacks in Europe’s history.
Tonight on 60 Minutes, Emma spoke to Ross Coulthart about how the attacks unfolded, her fight for survival, and the scars she’ll always carry from her experience in the Bataclan.
When gunshots began ringing around the Bataclan theatre at an Eagles of Death Metal concert, Emma Parkinson assumed – like many other concert-goers – that the noise was a firework let off by an over-enthusiastic fan.
“I thought for a second someone had fireworks. You know, like just little fireworks that you buy at the supermarket,” Emma told Coulthart.
“I remember thinking, ‘What an idiot. Who does that at a concert?’ But I remember thinking that something wasn’t right, and trying to drop down to the ground. And it didn’t take long for other people to do that, as well. And I looked back at one point and that’s just a really weird image. Almost a thousand people just on the floor, like that, in a concert hall.”
As the shots continued, the realisation began to dawn on the people in the hall that something was seriously wrong.
“They would fire and then it would stop for, I don’t know, five seconds maybe, and we’d think it was over. And people would start putting their heads up, looking around and then it would start again and everyone would get back down.”
Top Comments
Yes, everybody is different. That is the whole point... when something traumatic happens, everyone reacts in their own way. No way is right or wrong, it is just their way of dealing with the situation. Just because she reacts in a way you don't relate to, can not understand or think she should behave differently because you would, does not make it any less painful or unreal to her. Judging that she should react this way or that way, based on immaturity, is frankly judgemental. Why can't people just let people be?
I was just astonished by how mature, intelligent and articulate this young women was. If she is representative of what more most young Aussie's are like, we have a very bright future to look forward to.