Truro News

Forty-nine people to decide whether Muslims get own cemetery ‘We want to be like everybody else’

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After six Muslim men were shot dead inside a Quebec City mosque last January, relations between Muslims and the rest of the community were excellent, said Mohamed Kesri – and then the cemetery issue came up.

Plans are underway to open the first Quebec City-area cemetery owned and operated by Muslims, but a handful of people oppose the project and triggered a referendum, which takes place Sunday.

“There are Catholic cemeteries, Protestant cemeteries, Jewish cemeteries – we aren’t inventing anything here,” said Kesri, the man mandated by the Quebec City mosque to lead the project. “We want to be like everybody else.”

The proposed burial site is located in Saint-Apollinair­e, a town of 6,000 about 35 kilometres southwest of Quebec City.

Due to a Quebec law permitting referendum­s on zoning matters, 49 people who live and work around the proposed site will decide whether the thousands of Muslims in the Quebec City area get their own cemetery.

“If I had asked for an ordinary cemetery, it probably wouldn’t have bothered people,” said Saint-Apollinair­e Mayor Bernard Ouellet. “I think the fear has started because of the word, ‘Muslim.’”

If Sunday’s referendum fails, Ouellet said, “I don’t have a Plan B. On our level, we would have done the maximum effort.” Kesri isn’t nearly as resigned. Quebec adopted a law in June allowing municipali­ties to forgo referendum­s on land projects in order to give more power to local authoritie­s.

Kesri said Quebec City’s Muslim community will pressure politician­s to have the new legislatio­n applied - if need be.

“It’s clear to us we won’t abandon the project,” said Kesri. “They have the power to not do a referendum, so if we can have the law applied, then why not do it?”

Quebec City’s Muslims have been looking for a cemetery for two decades, but made a renewed push after they completed the payment for the city’s main mosque, in 2011, Kesri said.

It was there last January that a gunman shot dead six men in the main prayer hall and injured 19 others. The bodies were sent overseas and to Montreal for burial.

“Since the events of Jan. 29, there was an extraordin­ary sense of community,” Kesri said. “There were meetings after meetings. We were all incredibly surprised. We thought it would continue. And then this small minority risks destroying a project that belongs to thousands of Muslims.”

The land for the proposed cemetery is behind a non-denominati­onal funeral parlour called Harmonia, located along Saint-Apollinair­e’s industrial park.

Few people live around the area, which explains why only 49 people get to vote Sunday.

Sylvain Roy, Harmonia’s director, said his company offered to sell part of the land to Quebec City’s mosque for $215,000.

The plan is to have two cemeteries – one non-sectarian and another Muslim – side by side, he said.

“We had about 10-12 people come see us after we made the announceme­nt,” Roy said. “There is a small but ferocious opposition to this project.”

The project has also highlighte­d divisions within Quebec’s Muslim community, with some people preferring multiconfe­ssional cemeteries as opposed to Muslim ones.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Mohamed Kesri during an interview at the Centre Culturel Islamique de Quebec in Quebec City. Plans are underway to open the first cemetery in the Quebec City area owned and operated by Muslims, but a handful of people oppose the project and triggered a...
CP PHOTO Mohamed Kesri during an interview at the Centre Culturel Islamique de Quebec in Quebec City. Plans are underway to open the first cemetery in the Quebec City area owned and operated by Muslims, but a handful of people oppose the project and triggered a...

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