Faith groups come together for Syrian refugee families

Event takes place this Saturday, Oct. 31 at the Masjid Al-Iman Mosque, 2218 Quadra St.

  • Oct. 30, 2015 5:00 p.m.
Imam Ismail Nur, from the Masjid Al-Iman Mosque, and Oak Bay United Minister Michelle Slater are working with others from St. Aidan’s United Church to bring two or three refugee families to Victoria. The public is invited to learn more at an event this Saturday, Oct. 31 at the mosque.

Imam Ismail Nur, from the Masjid Al-Iman Mosque, and Oak Bay United Minister Michelle Slater are working with others from St. Aidan’s United Church to bring two or three refugee families to Victoria. The public is invited to learn more at an event this Saturday, Oct. 31 at the mosque.

Kendra Wong

Black Press

Members of Victoria’s Muslim and Christian communities are coming together to help bring Syrian refugee families to Victoria.

For the first time, the Masjid Al-Iman mosque joins the Oak Bay and St. Aidan’s United churches to hold a joint event this weekend in hopes of drawing attention to the refugee crisis in Syria.

Rev. Michelle Slater, with the Oak Bay United Church, said members of the congregation were moved to action after seeing images of three-year-old Alan Kurdi’s body washed up on a Turkish beach. Kurdi drowned after the boat his family was on from Turkey to Greece capsized.

The photo, which surfaced in September, has since garnered international attention and ignited communities across the world to help refugees.

“We were not only shocked, but felt deeply called to do something concrete,” Slater said, adding the partnership gives members the chance to learn more about the Muslim faith and build community relationships.

“We immediately thought that the Muslim community would be a vital ally in the work because we assume that most refugees from Syria and the Middle East are Muslim in faith and will need that kind of spiritual support.”

The group hopes to sponsor two or three families to Victoria, by not only providing financial support for living expenses (they’ve raised more than $58,000 so far), but also expertise in English as a second language training, childcare and helping people negotiate the medical system.

They’ve also committed to provide furniture, household goods, clothing, food and other basics when the families arrive.

Imam Ismail Nur said the event acts both as a fundraiser and as a way of bringing awareness to the refugee crisis.

“At the end of the day, what really matters is helping people in need because these are real people, real lives, and our action and inaction affects those kinds of people in that situation,” he said.

“We agreed that even though Christians and Muslims, they have their differences but the things that bring us together far outweigh those differences and one of those things is helping people in need.”

The event takes place this Saturday, Oct. 31, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Masjid Al-Iman Mosque (2218 Quadra St.) and will include speakers from the Victoria Immigrant and Refugee Centre Society and the British Columbia Muslim Association as well as a tour of the mosque.

 

 

Oak Bay News