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Thursday, 12 March 2020

One year after Christchurch we seek solace in community and being unapologetically Muslim | Sara Mansour

In many ways, life has not changed for many of my Muslim friends and me because the world has not changed. However, hope exists

A body on the floor of a place of worship is still a body
The fall, and the thump, and the snap
There is nothing beautiful about the way the blood sprays the sacred walls
The way it hangs itself a tapestry of death and despair

And we dig deep
We try to find the beauty in tragedy


Iman Etri, Bankstown Poetry Slam, March 2019

The scars of the Christchurch massacre linger. Time has carpeted the pain. Slowly but surely, the shock recedes until all we feel is the echo of the tragedy. One year on after Haji Daoud Nabi walked out of the Al Noor mosque in Christchurch and uttered the words “Welcome, brother” only to be met with bullets in response.

Related: Brutalised but defiant: Christchurch massacre survivors one year on

Related: New Zealand gun reform stalled as Christchurch anniversary approaches

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from Islam | The Guardian https://ift.tt/33edC0H

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