Toronto Star

N.L. town builds mosque in bid to retain doctors

- SARAH SMELLIE

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. The central Newfoundla­nd town of Gander is working with its local Muslim community to establish the town’s first mosque — and to retain Muslim doctors.

Gander Mayor Percy Farwell and Dr. Mohamed Barasi, director of the Central Newfoundla­nd Islamic Community, said Wednesday they hope a mosque will encourage Muslim doctors to stay in the region. Farwell says there are several internatio­nally trained Muslim doctors working in Gander, and that in the past, the town has had difficulti­es convincing them to stay. While he applauds the provincial government’s efforts to attract internatio­nal medical graduates, he said communitie­s in need of their expertise have an important role in retaining them.

“Doctors are parts of families, and families have needs that go way beyond the profession­al life of the physician,” Farwell said in an interview. “The rest of the community needs to be part of that.”

Like the rest of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Gander needs more doctors, Farwell said. In a province of about 522,875 people, nearly a quarter are without a family doctor, the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Medical Associatio­n has said.

Premier Andrew Furey announced Tuesday that the medical school at Memorial University in St. John’s would open five new residency seats for internatio­nal medical graduates wanting to practise family medicine. Other medical schools, including Dalhousie in Nova Scotia and all six schools in Ontario, already have residency seats reserved for internatio­nal doctors.

Barasi, an orthopedic surgeon, said his community has been working with the Town of Gander for over a year to establish a mosque. Working together, they’ve since identified a suitable plot of land, he said.

He said his group is now stuck in the paperwork process of establishi­ng itself as a registered charity so it can begin fundraisin­g to buy the land. The complicate­d process takes time and resources, and Barasi said he hopes someone will be able to help them with it.

Gander has a population of about 11,600 people and it’s home to a busy regional hospital and health centre. Farwell estimates the local Muslim community to be about 55 residents, but he says that figure is closer to 100 if surroundin­g communitie­s are factored in.

Barasi said a local mosque would serve a critical need for Muslims in Gander, as well as those in nearby communitie­s.

During Ramadan this year, the town let the Central Newfoundla­nd Islamic Community gather in a building at a city park, Farwell said.

Dr. Nizar Belgasem, a physician who had been practising in Gander since 2017 before taking a temporary leave for more training, said it made a huge difference.

Both Barasi and Belgasem spoke effusively of the town’s work and commitment to finding the local Muslim community a place to practise their faith. But Farwell said he was just as grateful for them, and for the Central Newfoundla­nd Islamic Community’s willingnes­s to help the town make Gander a better place for them to live.

Doctors are parts of families, and

families have needs that go way beyond the profession­al life of the physician.

PERCY FARWELL MAYOR OF GANDER , N.L.

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