I've got a couple of students online and the one pattern I've found is, have a project in mind you'd like to build. It keeps that inspiration for longer vs. just going through tutorials and pushes you a bit more to learn specific things, "Okay, how do I process a CSV file now". You SHOULD still go through a good tutorial or two to get overview of different concepts and components in the frameworks (the tutorials others have mentioned are solid).
One problem with learning while building (or learning by yourself in general) is bad practices. "Two Scoops of Django" is still a good one, though a bit old, but again it will teach some overarching concepts and approaches. And then getting feedback from others!
Apart from Django, Openclassrooms is the site where most French Programmers learned to do so, and it's an incredible ressource. It teaches you all the subjects from the ground-up assuming you have almost no knowledge.
1. The Django Girls tutorial (multi-language): https://tutorial.djangogirls.org/
2. Will Vincent's books (also recommend his blog): https://wsvincent.com/best-django-books/
3. Tango with Django: https://www.tangowithdjango.com/
Also, here's a somewhat more comprehensive list of Django learning resources: https://www.fullstackpython.com/django.html