Toronto Star

Trudeau’s message of hope for mourners

All responsibl­e for leading fight against injustice: PM

-

QUEBEC— A mass shooting that killed six men at a Quebec mosque is a grim reminder that hateful words seeking to exclude or demean others can have tragic consequenc­es, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a funeral service Friday for three of the victims.

“It’s high time those behind these messages — whether they are politician­s, radio or TV hosts or other public personalit­ies — realize the harm their words can cause,” Trudeau said, prompting a wave of applause.

“Confronted with these words that hurt and exclude, it falls on us to defend the values that are important to us,” he told several thousand mourners at the Quebec City convention centre.

“Every one of us is responsibl­e for leading the fight against injustice and discrimina­tion in daily life, for acting in a way that represents who we are, that represents Canada, that represents the country that Azzeddine Soufiane, Mamadou Tanou Barry and Ibrahima Barry loved so much.” Trudeau said Mamadou Tanou Barry, 42, Ibrahima Barry, 39, from Guinea, and Soufiane, 57, from Morocco, were extraordin­ary men who loved their families, their communitie­s and their faith.

The ceremony came a day after a similar service in Montreal for Abdelkrim Hassane, 41, Khaled Belkacemi, 60, and Aboubaker Thabti, 44, the three other people shot to death in the carnage.

Hussein Guillet, an imam, said it is important to build on the tragedy.

“God gave us a lemon, let’s make lemonade out of that,” he said. “Let us build on this negative and then have something positive.”

Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard and Quebec City Mayor Régis Labeaume also addressed the audience, with the latter striking a particular­ly emotional chord when he told Soufiane’s adolescent son, “We love you.” Labeaume also announced the Muslim community in the city will get the cemetery it has been asking for. Couillard, who opened his speech in Arabic, echoed Trudeau’s message on the importance of dialogue in the wake of the tragedy.

“A lot has been said, a lot has been heard and hopefully a lot has been understood,” he said.

Couillard made a point of using several Arabic phrases, including “Allahu akbar,” which means “God is great” and which the premier said is often falsely associated with violence and terrorism.

 ?? MATHIEU BELANGER/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Mourners in Quebec City gather by the coffins of Azzeddine Soufiane, Mamadou Tanou Barry and Ibrahima Barry.
MATHIEU BELANGER/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Mourners in Quebec City gather by the coffins of Azzeddine Soufiane, Mamadou Tanou Barry and Ibrahima Barry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada