Open invite to ceremony for Quebec mosque shooting victims: N.L Muslim Association - Action News
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Open invite to ceremony for Quebec mosque shooting victims: N.L Muslim Association

People from all faiths are gathering in St. Johns Tuesday evening to remember victims of the massacre at a mosque in Quebec City.

Muslim community promoting tolerance at ceremony to mark grim anniversary

Dr. Mansoor Pirzada is President of the Muslim Association of Newfoundland & Labrador. (Ted Dillon/CBC)

People of different religious beliefs, politicians and police officers are just some of the attendees expected at Tuesday's ceremony in St. John's to honour and remember those who were killed at a Quebec City mosque exactly two years ago.

"We expect anybody who wants to come and join," saidMansoorPirzada, president of the Muslim Association of Newfoundland and Labrador.

"It's going to be a very short meeting. They will express their thoughts, and there will be a short prayer for the people who died and people who are dealing with injuries and everything."

Six people were killed and 19 others injuredwhen Alexandre Bissonetteopened fire during a prayer service at the Islamic Cultural Centre of Quebec on Jan.29, 2017. Hewill be sentenced on Feb. 8.

Ripple effect

In the months following the Quebec massacre, enhanced security measures came into effect at the St. John's mosque, such as installing security gates.

ButPirzadasaidsmaller, and more subtle, attackson Muslims persist in many areas of Canadian life.

A woman leaves flowers at a makeshift memorial outside the Islamic Cultural Centre of Quebec City following the shooting in January 2017. (CBC)

A recent Statistics Canada reportshows the number of hate crimes in Canada has gone up in each of the past four years, driven by increased attacks on Muslim, Jewish and black populations.

"We have seen over the past several years that the hate crimes have increased, tremendously,"Pirzadasaid.

"Today's remembrance is tonot only remember those who died,but also those who are surviving with this huge trauma."

'Canada not the place for hate'

Pirzadasaid the event, which begins at 7 p.m. at theMasjidAlNoor on Logy Bay Road, isa chance for all people to show they reject racism and religious intolerance.

A vigil was held at the mosque in St. John's on Feb. 3, 2017, just days after the attack in Quebec City. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)

"Canada is not the place for hate. Canada is not the place for racism or bigotry," he said.

"It's a continuing effort, it's not just a one-time thing."

In recent years,Pirzadanotesthat many Muslimshave made an extra effort to get involved in their community.

In St. John's, for example, Muslimshave gone door-to-door shovelling driveways in the winter. Many local schools have also sent classes to visit the mosque.

It's through these efforts that Pirzadabelievesthere can be a lasting positive legacy from one of the worst hate crimes in recent Canadian history.

"We have to live together, and that's what we are trying to teach our community at large, and students and schools." he said.

Read more stories from CBC Newfoudland and Labrador