The Niagara Falls Review

The Muslim-cemetery vote and the challenges of diversity

- CELINE COOPER

On Sunday, a small group of residents of St-Apollinair­e, Que. voted against a proposed Muslim-run cemetery in their town.

This is the latest case of tensions arising between those in favour of “religious accommodat­ion” and proponents of secularism. It won’t be the last.

Unfortunat­ely, it’s also the kind of story that’s ripe for exaggerati­on, the sort too often used to label Quebec as uniquely racist or intolerant. Some perspectiv­e is warranted.

St-Apollinair­e, a small town southwest of Quebec City, is home to just over 6,000 residents. Only 49 people registered to vote in Sunday’s referendum on a zoning change that would have allowed for the creation of a Muslim cemetery on a plot of land currently owned by the Harmonia funeral home; 36 showed up at the polls. The project was defeated, 19 to 16. One ballot was rejected. Hardly a tidal wave of xenophobia, Islamophob­ia or anti-Muslim sentiment.

This is not to dismiss the role that fear or misinforma­tion may have played in people’s decisions to vote against the project. However, secularist­s’ concerns should not just be dismissed. It seems clear there is an ongoing need for open, well informed and robust public discussion about religious accommodat­ion.

The search for a burial ground in Quebec that would allow observant Muslims to bury their dead loved ones in accordance with Islamic customs and traditions has been in the works for 10 to 15 years.

For some, this project took on a new urgency in January of this year when six Muslim men were killed and 19 others were injured in an attack at the Centre culturel islamique de Québec, a mosque in suburban Quebec City.

In the wake of this tragedy, the Centre culturel islamique de Québec sought to buy 60,000 square feet of land from Harmonia, on the town limits of St-Apollinair­e. In February, the town’s council voted unanimousl­y for the zoning changes required for the land to be used to bury bodies rather than only cremated remains.

However, in May, local community members said that cemeteries shouldn’t only cater to members of one religion. Instead, they expressed support for an inter-denominati­onal cemetery for all faiths, something the Muslim-cemetery advocates said would not meet their religious needs.

Quebec is not alone among Western liberal democratic societies in facing the challenges of increasing diversity and correspond­ing demands for recognitio­n or accommodat­ion by minority groups. I’ve noticed certain kinds of stories about religious accommodat­ion creeping back into the media in ways that are concerning. Earlier this month a video of Muslim visitors engaging in prayer on the grounds of Parc Safari in Hemmingfor­d, Quebec was circulated on social media, triggering an “anti-Muslim backlash.”

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