Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mayor Signs Deed For Quebec City's First Muslim Cemetery, Set To Open In Spring

Darpan News Desk, 19 Dec, 2019 12:00 AM

    Quebec City's mayor has signed a deed of sale for a parcel of land that will soon become the region's first Muslim cemetery.

     

    Mayor Regis Labeaume had promised the land to the city's Muslim community in 2017, shortly after residents of a nearby town voted against a proposal to open an Islamic cemetery in their area.

     

    The mayor was joined for the public signing Thursday by Boufeldja Benabdallah, president of the main mosque in Quebec City, who thanked Labeaume for pushing ahead with the project and avoiding a divisive debate.

     

    Benabdallah says Quebec City's Muslims have been working to have their own cemetery for 20 years.

     

    Community members seeking formal Islamic burials have had to send their dead to Montreal.

     

    The Quebec City Muslim cemetery is expected to open by the spring.

     

    Benabdallah's mosque was the site of a mass shooting in January 2017, when a gunman murdered six men in the main prayer hall.

     

    The following summer, residents of Saint-Apollinaire, 35 kilometres southwest of Quebec City, rejected a proposal to open the area's first Muslim cemetery on their territory, by a vote of 19 to 16.

     

    At Thursday's ceremony, Labeaume invited citizens to "love each other." He told reporters Quebec City is changing, and new waves of immigration will make the city — and the rest of the province — more diverse.

     

    "As of today, we need to start thinking about what we can do, about the steps we can take in our community, so that we can all live together in harmony," he said.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lesser V. Least: No Right To 'Comb The Past' For Favourable Penalty, Court Says

    Lesser V. Least: No Right To 'Comb The Past' For Favourable Penalty, Court Says
    However, the guilty party does not have a constitutional right to the least severe penalty that might have been in effect between those two points.    

    Lesser V. Least: No Right To 'Comb The Past' For Favourable Penalty, Court Says

    Power Out, Highways Closed: Blast Of Early Winter Cripples Southern Manitoba

    Power Out, Highways Closed: Blast Of Early Winter Cripples Southern Manitoba
    WINNIPEG - An early blast of winter-like weather knocked out power and made travel nearly impossible in many parts of southern Manitoba on Friday.    

    Power Out, Highways Closed: Blast Of Early Winter Cripples Southern Manitoba

    More Than 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Workers Approve Strike Mandate

    More Than 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Workers Approve Strike Mandate
    VANCOUVER - Unifor says more than 5,000 Metro Vancouver transit operators at the Coast Mountain Bus Co. have voted in favour of a strike mandate.    

    More Than 5,000 Coast Mountain Bus Workers Approve Strike Mandate

    Toronto Syrian Restaurant That Closed Due To Threats Reopens

    TORONTO - A popular Syrian restaurant in Toronto reopened Friday amid messages of support and media attention, just days after its owners said a flood of threats had forced them to close.

    Toronto Syrian Restaurant That Closed Due To Threats Reopens

    Pipeline Politics Loom Large In Final Scheduled Federal Leaders' Debate

    The spirited two-hour contest marked a milestone for the federal election: it's the final time the six federal party leaders faced Canadians before advance polls open Friday

    Pipeline Politics Loom Large In Final Scheduled Federal Leaders' Debate

    Politicians In Yukon Vote Unanimously To Declare Climate Emergency

    Politicians In Yukon Vote Unanimously To Declare Climate Emergency
    WHITEHORSE - Members of Yukon's legislature have voted to declare a climate emergency.    

    Politicians In Yukon Vote Unanimously To Declare Climate Emergency