In the aftermath of the devastating New Year’s Eve fire at Le Constellation bar that claimed approximately 40 lives, the story of 19-year-old Ferdinand Du Beaudiez has emerged as one of the most harrowing and heroic accounts of the tragedy. The young Frenchman did not flee when flames erupted — he turned back into the inferno to save his brother, girlfriend, and friends, in an act of courage that has left investigators and the world in awe and sorrow.

The blaze began around 1:30 a.m. on January 1, triggered by sparklers igniting flammable ceiling foam and rapidly spreading through the overcrowded venue. Ferdinand, visiting from Lyon with a group of friends, managed to escape the initial surge of flames. But moments after reaching safety, he realized his loved ones were still inside.

“I couldn’t let them burn,” he later told police in a trembling interview from his hospital bed. Covering his face with his jacket, Ferdinand charged back through the smoke-filled entrance, navigating collapsing debris and searing heat. What he saw stopped him cold: blocked stairwells, bodies collapsed in panic, and flames exploding with every breath.

For several minutes, he searched the upper floor, calling names and pulling at unconscious figures. He found his brother, 17-year-old Louis, unconscious near a window, and dragged him toward the exit. He also located his girlfriend, 19-year-old Camille Moreau, but was overcome by smoke inhalation before he could reach her.

Ferdinand staggered out again carrying Louis, collapsing just outside as rescuers took over. Both were hospitalized for severe smoke inhalation and burns. Tragically, Camille and several friends did not survive. The minute-by-minute account investigators are studying — reconstructed from Ferdinand’s testimony, survivor statements, and partial CCTV — has become a haunting centerpiece of the probe.

“I ran back because I thought I could get them all,” Ferdinand said, voice breaking. “But the smoke was so thick… the heat was unbearable. I heard them screaming behind me… then nothing.”

The fire, one of Switzerland’s deadliest in modern history, has prompted national mourning and calls for stricter venue safety laws. President Guy Parmelin described Ferdinand’s actions as “extraordinary courage in the face of unimaginable terror.”

Ferdinand, now recovering in hospital, faces long-term lung damage. His brother Louis survived but remains in intensive care. The loss of Camille and friends has left deep scars.

Survivors and witnesses have called Ferdinand a hero. “He went back when everyone else ran,” one said. “That’s the kind of person who saves lives.”

As forensic teams continue examining the site, Ferdinand’s story stands as a stark reminder of love and sacrifice amid chaos. In the jaws of death, one young man ran back — and paid an unimaginable price.