Tempe vigil for New Zealand victims wields love to overcome hate, terrorism

  • Slug: BC-CNS-Mosque Vigil. 705 words.
  • 2 photos and captions below.
  • Video by Bayan Wang here.

EDS: A previous version of this story included an incorrect age for one of the attendees. Mahleej Zara is 21. The story below has been corrected, but clients who used previous versions are asked to run the correction that can be found here.

By HAILEY MENSIK
Cronkite News

TEMPE – United, they mourned, coming together in Arizona in a vigil to show that love triumphs over hate.

Muslims. Jews. Christians. Lawmakers and civil rights activists.

Hours after 50 people were gunned down and dozens were injured in a terrorist attack at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, last week, Arizonans spoke of overcoming hate at a candlelight vigil at the Islamic Community Center of Tempe on Saturday.

Their voices joined thousands of others in the state and around the world.

“It’s so much love,” said Mahleej Zara, 21, adding that the outpouring reminded her of a vigil she attended nearly a year ago when the Tempe mosque was vandalized.

Her friend, Mira Aiche, looked around at the hundreds of people who assembled Saturday.

“I was telling her I got goosebumps just by looking at people from all faiths and different ages, colors, everything,” said Aiche, 22. “It just makes me feel so happy that people are here to support us, and we’ll be there to support you in your time of need.”

Those who spoke condemned Islamophobia, white supremacy and hate-filled rhetoric that they said fueled the Christchurch attacks.

“Unfortunately this is not the first, nor expected to be the last shooting tragedy,” said Ahmad Shqeirat, senior imam at the Tempe mosque. “And this is not the first time we gather together to stand united and show solidarity with one another after an attack.”

A year ago, two women Facebook livestreamed themselves at the mosque mocking Muslims and encouraging three children to steal flyers they called propaganda. The women were charged with burglary and criminal damage.

Tempe City Council member Lauren Kuby praised the mosque for its response to that incident.

“We responded with a vigil, but more importantly the entire community center invited those white supremacists to their community center to talk to them about Islam,” Kuby said.

The suspect in the New Zealand attacks, a 28-year-old Australian, also livestreamed the attack, according to media reports.

“We know that hatred is here in America, and we’ve got to stand against it,” said Roy Tatem, president of the East Valley NAACP. “We can’t tolerate it whenever it yields its hand, whether it’s against our Muslim brothers and sisters, our Jewish brothers and sisters, our LGBTQ brothers and sisters and definitely with our African-American and Latino brothers and sisters.”

Shqeirat, who called for unity, decried an Australian senator’s statement blaming immigration on the attack.

“Our message in response is that we will embrace the immigrants more, host the immigrants more, welcome immigrants more,” Shqeirat said.

In the days following the New Zealand attack, Phoenix police have been encouraged to monitor local mosques more closely, a Police Department spokesman said. Two off-duty officers came to offer protection at the Tempe mosque during Jumaa Prayer, a weekly Muslim prayer service on Fridays, he said.

On Saturday, police arrested a man accused of threatening and intimidating members of the United Islamic Center of Arizona in north Phoenix. Police said Noel Becht went to the center, saying he was curious about Islam and asking to sit in on a prayer service. But he later entered rooms without permission and asked unusual questions about the times of services.

When questioned by a mosque leader, he allegedly put a finger to his neck and made a sawing motion. Becht was booked into a Maricopa County jail.

Zara and her friend, Mira Aiche, weren’t aware of the Phoenix incident at Saturday’s vigil.

But they said they weren’t afraid to come to the mosque where they’ve prayed for years. Instead, they felt more compelled after the shootings in New Zealand. They said they noticed more people on Friday than usual.

“I went to both services,” Zara said. “I wanted to be there at the mosque, showing that we’re not afraid and this isn’t going to change anything.”

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has vowed to change the country’s gun laws and said a Cabinet meeting was scheduled Monday to discuss reform. The gunman who opened fire at two New Zealand mosques was charged with murder Saturday.

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— Video by Bayan Wang/Cronkite News

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Friends Mahleej Zara (left) and Mira Aiche say they are grateful for the support and love shown by those of many faiths who came to a vigil honoring the victims of the New Zealand mosque attacks last week. (Photo by Ashley Carter/Cronkite News)
Hundreds attended a candlelight vigil Saturday at the Islamic Community Center of Tempe to honor the shooting victims at two mosques in New Zealand last week. (Photo by Hailey Mensik/Cronkite News)