On March 15 last year, I lost a close friend in the Christchurch attacks. When Haji-Daoud Nabi greeted a stranger at the door of the Al Noor mosque with “hello brother”, he was shot dead – one of 51 people killed.
In the hours after the Christchurch mosque attacks on March 15 last year, I wrote that I hoped New Zealand would finally stop believing it was immune to far-right extremist violence. A year on, I’m not sure enough has changed.
Rima Asfour's poem recently won the Why Humanities annual Poetry Competition at the University of Windsor.
As Muslims in Canada watch coverage of the people of New Zealand showing support and solidarity with local Muslim communities after the terrorist attacks against two mosques in New Zealand, they have also been learning more about the Indigenous peoples of New Zealand, the Maori.
Devastatingly, the violence that we experienced in Quebec City has now spread to Christchurch, New Zealand.
Sign up for our free Muslim Link Snapshot and get our events listing and latest articles sent to your inbox weekly.
Canadian Muslim Public Affairs Council (CMPAC) Launches A Policy Handbook on Combatting Islamophobia
Working While Muslim: New Report from York University’s Islamophobia Research Hub Explores Challenges Faced by Muslims with Employment in the Greater Toronto Hamilton Area
The shooting at the Islamic Center of San Diego is part of a far‑right curriculum of violence