FAITH UNDER FIRE
ISLAMIC MOSQUE TORCHED IN ONTARIO
'I'm absolutely angry. This is a hate crime'
November 17, 2015
Richard Warnica
Posted with permission from National Post
Posted with permission from National Post
Rev. Eilert Frerichs, the minister at Mark Street United, said whoever attacked the mosque was acting 'like a terrorist.' 'When we use tactics...
PETERBOROUGH, Ont. - On Monday afternoon, as the sun began to set, Avril Rustaigh-Johnston pulled her bad knee up the stairs outside the only mosque here.
She held a bouquet of flowers in her left hand, her right leaned heavily on the plastic rail. When she reached the top, she tried the handle and found it locked. So she left the flowers out front, perched gently against the wooden door.
The woman came to the mosque Monday to defend her long-time home, in a way, and to apologize for it.
Peterborough, a small town and gown city northeast of Toronto, was the site Saturday of what police are now treating as a hate crime.
Kenzu Abdella, a Trent professor and the president of the Kawartha Muslim Religious Association, got a call about 11 p.m. that night from a friend.
Abdella, who lives 10 minutes away, raced down the street. He saw smoke pouring out of the building.
In the end, firefighters extinguished the blaze. No one was hurt. The mosque was empty. But the damage inside was significant.
Politicians at all levels, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, condemned the incident Sunday and Monday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette Flowers outside the mosque Masjid Al-Salaam in Peterborough, Ont., on Monday, Nov. 16, 2015.
"The values that make our country great are values that celebrate our diversity and our religious tolerance," he said. "Canada is a country that is strong, not in spite of our differences, but because of them."
As Abdella stood outside the mosque Monday afternoon, speaking to reporters, Pat Parnall, a resident drove, past in tears.
Sameena Quadri and her family, who live just up the street from the mosque, moved to Peterborough about 10 years ago. They are originally from Pakistan.
Speaking Monday, she seemed almost bemused by the attack on the mosque. The locals, she said, "are good friends to us."
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov Congregation members clean up debris, on Sunday, Nov. 15, 2015, after the only mosque in Peterborough, Ont., was deliberately set alight Saturday night.
Larry Gillman, president of the local Beth Israel Synagogue, heard about the attack Sunday night while attending an interfaith dinner to raise money for Syrian refugees.
"I'm angry. I'm absolutely angry," he said. "This is a hate crime."
The Muslim congregation had already accepted an offer from the Mark Street United Church downtown to use its friendship room for the Friday gathering.
"When we use tactics of hate, we become the enemy," he said.
"More than anything else, at a time of fear and hatred, what we need is reconciliation," he said. "That's what I want people to know."
While no specific evidence to support that conclusion was found, Insp. Larry Charmley said, it's obvious the Muslim community was targeted.
Saturday's attack came not long after a divisive federal election, where a Muslim woman's right to wear a niqab at a citizenship ceremony became, for a time, a dominant issue. On Monday, the new federal government announced it was abandoning an appeal launched by the Conservatives in that case.
Dilip Dav, president of the Ram Dham Hindu Temple, said several windows at the rear entrance of the temple were shattered late Sunday. None one inside was hurt, but they were unable to see who did the damage.
National Post, with files from The Canadian Press and Peterborough Examiner
• Email: rwarnica@nationalpost.com | Twitter: richardwarnica
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