Montreal Gazette

Muslim cemetery nixed by ‘fear and disinforma­tion’

St-Apollinair­e mayor disappoint­ed as voters reject plan 19 to 16

- MORGAN LOWRIE

It was by the slimmest ST-APOLLINAIR­E of margins a plan to establish the Quebec City area’s first Muslim-owned and run cemetery was defeated in a referendum Sunday by a vote of 19 to 16.

Voters were deciding whether or not to allow a zoning change for the proposed site in St-Apollinair­e, 35 kilometres southwest of Quebec City.

The plan for the cemetery was developed after January’s deadly mosque shooting, but the issue was sent to a referendum after enough people came forward to oppose the project.

In the end, the outcome came down to the 35 people who cast valid ballots — a tough pill to swallow for the man who led the project.

“How can it be that 19 (people) can stop a project by several thousand people? It doesn’t make sense,” said Mohamed Kesri, the man mandated by the Quebec City mosque to lead the project.

St-Apollinair­e Mayor Bernard Ouellet also said he was disappoint­ed by the result, which he chalked up to “fear and disinforma­tion.”

“I think there needs to be more understand­ing when it comes to Muslims,” he said. “I’ve said this from the beginning, I think what turned people against (the project) is a lot of misunderst­anding about that group,” he said.

But another resident, who was involved in the campaignin­g, said she and many others believe a multi-faith cemetery would be a better choice for the city.

“Multi-denominati­onal is the future,” said Sunny Letourneau, who lives outside the voting area but says she would have voted ‘no’ had she cast a ballot.

“Young people under 50 are more and more numerous in not wanting to attend any church at all.”

Letourneau said various other solutions were proposed, including an Islamic section in a multifaith cemetery.

Far from being a victory, she said the referendum results were sad for everyone.

“People are extremely divided,” she said through tears. “Some families are being driven apart by this.”

Ouellet says he doesn’t have a “Plan B” now that the initiative has been rejected.

“I don’t have another step in sight,” he said.

Because of a Quebec law permitting referendum­s on zoning matters, only 49 people who live and work around the proposed site were eligible to vote.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada