Joel Laloux sold the music hall in September after running it for nearly 40 years and now lives in Israel, where he learnt of Friday's hostage-taking and massacre during a rock concert there.
"I have huge hope that with the enormous outpouring of solid0arity in France and worldwide there is a human desire to make sure that this place is not assassinated," the 63-year-old told AFP at his home in the southern city of Ashdod.
Laloux is an observant Jew and was marking the Sabbath when the attacks occurred on Friday night.
Mobile phone use is not allowed on the Sabbath, but he decided to answer anyway after several insistent calls.
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He was given details on the situation as the hostage-taking was underway and also turned on the television as the magnitude of what was happening became clear.
Laloux said the images that he saw have painfully stayed with him, but he forced himself to watch, almost in disbelief. He said he felt "disgust and horror."
The attack occurred during a sold-out concert by US rock band Eagles of Death Metal, known for their irreverent approach and bluesy sound.
Eighty-nine people were killed and many others wounded. A total of 129 people died in the coordinated attacks in and near Paris that night.
Laloux angrily dismissed suggestions that the venue was targeted because of his family's Jewish roots or due to the fact that it has hosted events in support of the Israeli army and Jewish charities.
Such speculation has spread widely online and among the French Jewish community, but he said trying to link the two is "stupid and pointless."
"When a concert is held at the Bataclan, there are between 1,500 and 2,000 people," he said.
The Bataclan was built in 1864 in the chinoiserie style and is named after Ba-ta-clan -- a "Chinoiserie musical" by German-born French composer Jacques Offenbach. It later hosted marriages and neighbourhood events.