<p>One year ago, four million people lined the streets of French cities to pay their respects to the victims of the terror attacks on the Charlie Hebdo offices and a kosher supermarket in the capital. France stood united against the jihadists' barbarity, but uncertain of the future.</p><br />How could French citizens have committed such massacres in the name of religion? Was the French Republic’s ideal of building a common society broken beyond repair? FRANCE 24's reporters went to the northeastern nineteenth district of Paris, a multi-ethnic neighbourhood with large Jewish and Muslim communities. This area was also home to some French jihadists, most notably the Kouachi brothers who decimated the Charlie Hebdo newsroom.<br />In this Paris district, civil society groups have long been working to build bridges and dialogue between communities, but since the Paris attacks, their efforts have become more crucial than ever.<br />A programme prepared by Patrick Lovett and Elom Marcel Toble.<br />Click on the video player above to see the full report.<br /><br />Visit our website:<br />http://www.france24.com<br /><br />Like us on Facebook:<br />https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.English<br /><br />Follow us on Twitter:<br />https://twitter.com/France24_en