The News (New Glasgow)

‘A legacy that continues on’

Local Muslim community opens the first mosque in Pictou County

- BRENDAN AHERN THE NEWS

TRENTON, N.S. — In 1990, the first mosque in St. John’s, N.L., opened its doors. Masjid-an-Noor at 430 Logy Bay has been the place of worship for that city’s Muslim community ever since.

Dr. Tim El-Tahan’s father was the one who started it, and now he’s following suit here in Pictou County.

“Being able to start that here and having gone through that experience in Newfoundla­nd was a really emotional thing to do,” said El-Tahan on Feb. 12. “It’s like a legacy that continued on.”

He was standing inside the former Christ the King Catholic Church in Trenton, which for the last two years has been empty except for the people who have come and gone to keep it in good condition.

On Sunday, Feb. 10, it was filled with worshipper­s again. It was the first day Pictou County’s Muslim community could come to a place of worship for their five daily prayers.

“A mosque is really the centrepiec­e of the Muslim community and so we’re calling this the Pictou County Islamic Centre,” said ElTahan. “This will be a community centre as well as a place of worship. It really helps gel the community together.”

Of course, that community has grown a lot in the last two years with the addition of more than 60 Syrian refugees.

“It was a big addition to the Muslim community here and we had been praying out of each others houses until then,” said El-Tahan.

By having the mosque, ElTahan also hopes it will give Pictou County an opportunit­y to retain other profession­als.

“I’m a physician and we’ve had several physicians come and go through the county who are Muslim. I think having a mosque here will do a lot to retain and recruit physicians moving forward.”

El-Tahan was elected president of the Muslim community last year and said their mandate at that time had been to find a place where they could all come together and worship.

Last summer the Muslim community approached the Diocese of Antigonish to inquire about the church. Through personal donations from local community members as well as help from the Islamic Associatio­n of Nova Scotia, which put out an appeal to members across the province, they were able to raise enough funds to buy the church at 25 Forge St.

“Initially, when we were looking at buying a church there were some people who were a little concerned about the optics of it and how that would go down,” said El-Tahan. “For me it was an opportunit­y to maintain this place as a place of worship.”

Having been born and raised in Newfoundla­nd and educated at a Catholic school, El-Tahan noticed at an early age the ways in which the Muslim and Christian faiths overlap.

“The things that bind us are so much more than the things that divide us,” said El-Tahan. “We want this to be a very inclusive space.”

 ?? BRENDAN AHERN/THE NEWS ?? Dr. Tim El-Taham standing inside the Pictou County Islamic Centre in Trenton. The mosque is the first in Pictou County.
BRENDAN AHERN/THE NEWS Dr. Tim El-Taham standing inside the Pictou County Islamic Centre in Trenton. The mosque is the first in Pictou County.

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