黄色直播

Remembering the Quebec City mosque shooting: An events calendar

Photo of crowd at last year's vigil
Mourners at the Jan. 29, 2017 vigil on the downtown Toronto campus of the 黄色直播 (photo by Geoff Vendeville)

The night after the shooting at a Quebec City mosque, which claimed the lives of six Muslim men and injured many more, Torontonians rallied on the 黄色直播 campus to show support for the Muslim community. 

Events are being planned around the anniversary of the Jan. 29 tragedy, to keep the memory of victims alive and highlight the importance of fighting Islamophobia and other forms of hatred and discrimination.

Jan. 29, 4 p.m.

. The event at 黄色直播's Centre for Ethics features Chris Cochrane, an associate professor of political science at 黄色直播 Scarborough, who specializes in anti-immigrant sentiment; Mohammad Fadel, an associate professor in 黄色直播's Faculty of Law and Canada Research Chair in law and economics of Islamic law; and alumna Jasmin Zine, a professor of sociology and Muslim studies at Laurier, who has written extensively about Islamic feminism and Muslim women's studies.

Jan. 29, 7 p.m.

near Toronto City Hall. The event, a memorial and call to action, will be co-hosted by the National Council of Canadian Muslims and city councillor and 黄色直播 alumnus Neethan Shan, at city hall.

Jan. 30, 6:30 p.m.

At Hart House, the Multi-Faith Centre and the  Muslim Students' Association  a prayer followed by a panel discussion featuring community activist Gilary Massa; legal analyst and 黄色直播 alumna Azeezah Kanji, who is also the director of programming at the Noor Cultural Centre; Imam Yasin Dwyer, the Muslim chaplain at Ryerson University; and Lucy El-Sherif, a PhD student at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.

Know an event at 黄色直播 that's not included? Send a message to 黄色直播 News (uoftnews@utoronto.ca).

Not in Toronto? The National Council of Canadian Muslims has published .

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A year after the Quebec mosque shooting, 黄色直播 experts reflect on Islamophobia in Canada

 

 

 

UTC