Quebec Mosque Reopens to Public 6 Years After Attack
QUEBEC (CBC) -- Six years after the deadly mosque attack in Quebec City, the Muslim community will gather in the same room where six men were killed and 19 injured on Jan. 29, 2017.
Mamadou Tanou Barry, Ibrahima Barry, Khaled Belkacemi, Abdelkrim Hassane, Azzeddine Soufiane and Aboubaker Thabti were killed shortly after evening prayers when a gunman opened fire just before 8 p.m. in the Islamic Cultural Centre in the Sainte-Foy neighborhood.
The attack that left 17 children fatherless and a community forever scarred will be commemorated as organizers also point to the importance of continuing to reflect on Islamophobia — particularly as hate and far-right extremism continues across Canada.
“It’s very emotionally charged,” said Maryam Bessiri, a spokesperson for the Commémoration citoyenne de l’attentat, the group organizing the event.
Speaking at a news conference at the mosque, she said it will be the first time the community gathers inside the mosque on the anniversary. This year, it falls on a Sunday, the same day the attack occurred six years ago.
“It’s very significant for us. We’re asking the population and all Quebecers who want to participate, to come to the Islamic Cultural Centre on Sunday … [It’s] part of our mission to be open and share with people.”
Bessiri notes that organizers and volunteers tried to use this anniversary as a jumping-off point — an opportunity to remember the lives lost while showcasing the work the Muslim community is doing to move past pervasive racism.
“For us, it gives us a voice to talk about Islamophobia, racism and also about how we have overcome the past six years and give the young people an opportunity to speak.… Each year we ask ourselves the same question about the pertinence of organizing a commemoration so that we can move beyond the tragedy that occurred,” said Bessiri.
“I would like to remind everyone that the commemoration on January 29 is the only occasion when we speak about Islamophobia in Quebec. We don’t speak about it outside of this, and that is unfortunate,” said Bessiri.
She noted that last year, they were planning the fifth commemoration right as the trucker convoy was starting in Ottawa — an event marked by demonstrations that pushed forward multiple far-right views.
“This shows us how fast progress can deteriorate and the discourse of the far right is always present…. That’s why in organizing the commemoration each year, in opening the doors, we are trying to counter this discourse,” said Bessiri, adding that the attacker was radicalized through extreme discourse over time.
Amira Elghawaby, Canada’s first and newly appointed representative to combat Islamophobia, says many assumptions about Muslim communities derive from pop culture and news stories which present a “narrow understanding of who Muslims are.”
“I’m sure all of us would agree we all have the right to go to a place of worship free of fear. We all have a right to go for a walk with our family,” said Elghawaby, referring to the 2021 attack on a Muslim family in London, Ont., when a mother, father, daughter and grandmother were killed while walking in their neighborhood, struck by a truck.
She said one of her primary concerns is that Canada has had a high number of hate-motivated fatalities against Muslims.
“That to me is shocking because I grew up here, I grew up believing in the promise of multiculturalism,” said Elghawaby.
“I believe in that promise and I’m going to really do my best to fulfill the promise of a country that is inclusive, that is diverse and that is strong because of it.”
Muhammad Labidi, president of the Islamic centre, says as part of the commemoration they want to welcome non-Muslims into the mosque.
We meet our fellow citizens with the purpose of demystifying the mosque and give them a chance to speak with Muslims to take another step toward living together as a community,” said Labidi.
“Time passes.… It’s our duty to remember.”
While the Muslim community feels a special duty to remember the attack and its victims, one survivor says Quebec society has a responsibility too.
“When we talk about society we’re talking about the government, the media, our neighbors and our colleagues at work, we’re talking about everyone. This responsibility has to be shared,” said Ahmed Cheddadi.
Before the attack, he says the media often participated in creating a “climate of Islamophobia.”
The organizers highlighted how a recent Quebec law, Bill 21 — which bans public servants from wearing religious symbols such as hijabs — undoes some of the progress the community has been trying to make.
Cheddadi said his own family is struggling with the law.
“I have a 15-year-old daughter and she doesn’t wear the hijab yet, that’s normal. But we have discussed it. She wants to be a teacher, that’s her dream. She told me, ‘Dad, do you think if I wear the hijab I will lose the opportunity to do my dream job?’” said Cheddadi as his voice broke.
“I said ‘unfortunately, yes sweetie, you will lose this opportunity in Quebec.’”
He noted the only solace he could offer her is reminding her that she could move out of the province.
Boufeldja Benabdallah, the co-founder of the Quebec Islamic Cultural Centre, says this kind of limit on symbols of faith targets women and takes away a big part of their religious freedom.
“That law is hurting our community.… And that negatively impacts the effort for us to live together as a community, said Benabdallah.
He says he wants to ensure the work his community put in over the past few years is not undone by laws that divide people. He reminded people at the news conference of why they first started the tradition of commemoration in the first place.
“The families told us on the first commemoration, ‘please we cannot forget our husbands who died in the mosque,’” said Benabdallah.
“I want to tell the family that we are standing with them. It’s an event that’s dedicated to all those who were taken.”