Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Syrian Refugees Attend Large-Scale Muslim Conference West Of Toronto

The Canadian Press, 11 Oct, 2016 10:39 AM
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — Hundreds of refugees from Syria were able to experience religious freedom for the first time in years as they gathered at a conference of 25,000 Ahmadiyya Muslims in Mississauga, Ont., this weekend.
     
    Wissam Alburaki, 41, brought his wife and three children to Canada as refugees last month, landing in Calgary by way of Kuwait and Dubai.
     
    And while Calgary is where his family intends to stay, Alburaki was west of Toronto over the weekend, attending Canada's Jalsa Salana — an annual meeting of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jama'at.
     
    He was one of hundreds of Syrian refugees attending the conference, according to Safwan Choudhry, a spokesperson for the Canadian chapter of the group.
     
    Members of the Islamic sect are estimated to be in the tens of millions, Choudhry said.
     
    And this year marks the 40th anniversary of the convention in Canada, which was attended by the community's spiritual leader, Caliph Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, who is from Pakistan.
     
     
    "It's very difficult to express my feelings. Before, we were seeing this on TV," Alburaki said. "But now we are in — we are part of this. So it's very difficult to express it by words, especially when English is not your first language."
     
    His family converted to the Ahmadiyya sect of Islam in the 1980s, he said. And since then, he's listened to what the Caliph has to say.
     
    But being in Canada, he was able to hear the leader speak in person for the first time.
     
    "With the situation in our country — in Syria — we cannot do this. It's a very large convention. We are meeting people from all over the world."
     
    Alburaki said that level of diversity, and of religious freedom, is something he wasn't able to experience in Syria in recent years.
     
    Choudhry said the Ahmadiyya community is frequently persecuted in the Muslim world because the community interprets the Qur’an differently. It believes that the promised Messiah came in the 19th century and advocates for the separation of Mosque and state.
     
    Persecution is especially present in Syria, Choudhry said, where many Ahmadiyya Muslims are forced to practise in secret.
     
    "For many people, it's actually more than the freedom of speech, to be able to practice your faith and profess to your God the way that you wish to, and nobody will object to it," he said.
     
     
    "You can imagine how fulfilling and powerful it is for them to know that they can practise their faith in peace. Many of the Syrian refugees ... could have never imagined going to such a convention in Syria."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Senate Could Fix Practice Of Citizenship Revocations Without Hearings

    Senate Could Fix Practice Of Citizenship Revocations Without Hearings
    OTTAWA — The Senate could come to the rescue of Canadians who are being stripped of their citizenship without a hearing.

    Senate Could Fix Practice Of Citizenship Revocations Without Hearings

    Trudeau praises late former Israeli PM Shimon Peres as 'real friend to Canada'

      The prime minister says Peres, who died early Wednesday at the age of 93, was an internationally respected statesman.

    Trudeau praises late former Israeli PM Shimon Peres as 'real friend to Canada'

    Ottawa Gives Conditional Approval To Giant Lng Project For B.C. Coast

    RICHMOND, B.C. — The federal government gave conditional approval Tuesday to the massive Pacific NorthWest LNG project planned for British Columbia's northwest coast.

    Ottawa Gives Conditional Approval To Giant Lng Project For B.C. Coast

    BC Students take Housing Message to the Legislature

    BC Students take Housing Message to the Legislature
    Following the release of the Alliance of BC Students’ White Paper earlier this month, which demonstrated that government policy was blocking over 20,000 units of student housing from being built, students have been active in getting their message to the public.

    BC Students take Housing Message to the Legislature

    Canada To Regulate Vaping Products To Help Shield Young People

    Canada To Regulate Vaping Products To Help Shield Young People
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government says it will introduce legislation this fall to regulate vaping.

    Canada To Regulate Vaping Products To Help Shield Young People

    Federal Intransigence Threatens Health Accord, B.C. Health Minister Warns

    Terry Lake says he is troubled by recent signals from Health Minister Jane Philpott that the federal Liberals plan to limit annual increases to three per cent — half the six per cent increase set out in Canada's last health accord.

    Federal Intransigence Threatens Health Accord, B.C. Health Minister Warns