His book Réussir sa mort: Anti-méthode pour vivre, won the Grand prix catholique de littérature in 2006. Currently Hadjadj teaches philosophy and literature in Toulon. He is married to the actress Siffreine Michel. They have ten children.[1] In 2014, Hadjadj was nominated as member of the Pontifical Council for the Laity.[2]
Publications
Traité de Bouddhisme zen à l'usage du bourgeois d'Occident (under the pseudonym Tetsuo-Marcel Kato), Éditions du PARC, 1998
Et les violents s'en emparent, Éditions Les Provinciales, 1999
A quoi sert de gagner le monde: Une vie de saint François Xavier, Éditions Les Provinciales, 2002; revised edition 2004 (Play)