The Star Malaysia

Survivor forgives gunman

Farid Ahmed from Christchur­ch ‘chooses peace’

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ChristChur­Ch: A Maori lament echoed across Christchur­ch as a survivor of the New Zealand mosque attacks told a national remembranc­e service he had forgiven the gunman responsibl­e for the racist massacre that took his wife, and shocked the world.

“I am choosing peace and I have forgiven,” wheelchair-bound Farid Ahmed told tens of thousands gathered in the grieving southern city, drawing sustained applause as he implored New Zealanders of all faiths to also reject hate.

Wearing a traditiona­l Maori cloak, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was among those who stood silently with heads bowed while the names of 50 people killed by a selfavowed white supremacis­t were read out.

Ardern, who was joined by representa­tives from nearly 60 nations, including her Australian counterpar­t Scott Morrison, received a prolonged standing ovation when she took the stage.

The 38-year-old leader, hailed for her response to the tragedy, praised the way New Zealanders embraced their devastated Muslim community since the attacks.

“Racism exists, but it is not welcome here,” she said, adding that she wanted New Zealand to set an example that would stop the cycle of extremism breeding extremism.

“We are not immune to the viruses of hate, of fear, of other – we never have been,” she said.

“But we can be the nation that discovers the cure.”

The service heard a Muslim invocation, or du’a, and Cat Stevens – the British singer who shunned stardom in the 1970s and became a Muslim, taking the name Yusuf Islam – gave a powerful rendition of his hit song Peace Train.

But the most moving moment came with the softly-spoken words of Ahmed, whose wife Husna was killed as she rushed back into a mosque trying to rescue her disabled husband. — AFP

 ??  ?? Together in grief: People attending the national remembranc­e service as Ardern (inset) places her hand over her heart as she walks past families of victims at Hagley Park in Christchur­ch. — Reuters/AFP
Together in grief: People attending the national remembranc­e service as Ardern (inset) places her hand over her heart as she walks past families of victims at Hagley Park in Christchur­ch. — Reuters/AFP
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