National Post (National Edition)

‘We never know how madness emerges’

Friend of mosque shooting suspect speaks out

- AND STEWART BELL in Toronto

GRAEME HAMILTON in Quebec City When he heard Sunday night that the mosque in his neighbourh­ood had been attacked, the 25-year-old man put on his parka and walked over to join the stunned onlookers watching as police cordoned off the scene.

An aspiring journalist, he posted a photo to Twitter in the middle of the night with the message that terror had struck “15 minutes walk from my home.”

On Monday he woke to news that the suspected shooter in an attack that left six Muslim worshipper­s dead was Alexandre Bissonnett­e, his friend since high school, the drinking buddy who loved to cook him meals and would join him on hikes.

“I was in a state of shock,” the friend told the National Post Wednesday. “It isn’t easy for me right now, honestly. We never know how or why madness emerges.”

“I thought I knew Alexandre Bissonnett­e but, at the end of the day, I didn’t know him.”

The man, whose name the National Post agreed not to publish because he fears becoming the target of online abuse, was one of Bissonnett­e’s closest friends, and three days after the attack he was shaking as he thought of the crime.

He knew Bissonnett­e, 27, held ultra-nationalis­t views, that he devoured so-called alt-right media from the United States and that he loathed aspects of Islam. But he had no clue the hatred allegedly ran so deep.

“People are describing him as a typical nerd, a bit of a freak, but I don’t think he was that much of a freak. He was normal, he seemed to have been brought up well,” he said.

“He didn’t like the Muslim religion, but he never said he wanted to exterminat­e them or that he considered them an inferior race.”

In the university chess club Bissonnett­e belonged to, there were Muslim members he enjoyed playing with. “There was even a girl with a hijab who he played with from time to time. He would say that this girl was nice,” the friend said.

He is now plagued by guilt, wondering if there were signs he missed. He knew Bissonnett­e admired French far-right leader Marine Le Pen and that he was thrilled with the election of Donald Trump in the United States. “He liked his protection­ism, his nationalis­m,” he said.

Bissonnett­e was proud of his heritage as a white Quebecer and opposed multicultu­ralism. “He was proud of his culture. He was maybe a bit of a Patriote, but nothing that seemed too dangerous,” he said. He never saw evidence his friend was a white supremacis­t.

Some commentato­rs and politician­s have pointed a finger at Quebec City’s notorious shock jocks for stirring anti-Muslim sentiment in the city, but the friend said Bissonnett­e favoured American media. In his apartment, he constantly had CNN or Fox News on, and online he was a fan of the conspiracy-mongering sites Breitbart and Infowars.

Others have identified a Quebec site Gauchedroi­tistan (literally, left-rightistan), which is primarily a venue for right-of-centre thought but also has leftleanin­g members, as a possible source of Bissonnett­e’s alleged hatred. The friend, who contribute­s to the site, said Bissonnett­e was never a member and had nothing to do with it.

Bissonnett­e liked guns from a young age and enjoyed hunting, but the friend is not a hunter and never paid much attention to the rifles he had. The Journal de Québec quoted a witness saying the gunman entered the mosque armed with a gun resembling a CZ-858 assault rifle, but it jammed and he used a 9 mm pistol.

Bissonnett­e’s friend said it is not true that he had cut off contact with his entourage in the past month. He went out with him last Thursday night to a campus pub at Université Laval. They talked, drank a few beers and hit the dance floor a few times. “He seemed good,” he said.

He is also friends with Bissonnett­e’s identical twin brother, but he hasn’t spoken to him or their parents since the shootings.

He wishes Bissonnett­e had reached out to him or his family. “He could have asked for help. He had a family, a brother, friends. He didn’t have enemies. He was not the anti-social being that has been described,” he said.

With the first funerals for the victims to be held Thursday in Montreal, it is now too late. He talks about Bissonnett­e in the past tense and no longer calls him a friend. “I speak of him as if he’s dead. It’s as if he doesn’t exist any more,” he said. “I feel betrayed.”

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