Azaan echoes across New Zealand as Muslims offer Friday prayers
A week after Christchurch attacks, New Zealand prays and falls silent for two minutes
CHRISTCHURCH:
The Muslim call to prayer relayed across New Zealand on Friday followed by two minutes of silence nationwide to mark a week since a white supremacist gunned down 50 people at two mosques in the city of Christchurch.
As the call was broadcast around the country, thousands of people - including Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern - stood silently in a park opposite the mosque where the killing began, as the country of 4.5 million came to a standstill.
The massacre by alleged shooter Brenton Tarrant has shocked a nation known for its tolerance. It has prompted horrified Kiwis to respond with vigils and performances of the traditional Maori haka dance, and to form lines behind Muslims to symbolically protect them while they pray.
An imam issued the call to regular Friday prayer at 1.30 pm (0030 GMT) with chants of "Allahu Akhbar" as thousands listened in Christchurch's Hagley Park across from the Al Noor Mosque.
The country then fell silent for two minutes, with public gatherings in Auckland, Wellington and other cities.
In neighbouring Australia, people stopped in the streets and in shops to mark the moment.
Al Noor imam Gamal Fouda then took to the lectern to denounce hatred, but also to praise the sense of Kiwi togetherness that the killings have sparked.
Unbreakable
"I look out and I see the love and compassion in the eyes of thousands of fellow New Zealanders and human beings from across the globe," he said. "This terrorist sought to tear our nation apart with an evil ideology that has torn the world apart. But, instead, we have shown that New Zealand is unbreakable."
Many women in attendance wore headscarves in solidarity with New Zealand's Muslim community.
Kirsty Wilkinson joined the throng at Hagley Park along with two female friends, all in make-shift hijabs. "I personally am doing this to knock down my walls of personal oblivion to the terror Muslim people feel every day, worrying about their safety," Wilkinson told AFP before the prayers began.
"I can take my scarf off if I feel afraid. They cannot. The message I want to send is that hate cannot win. We are all just people. What happened is not ok."
The terrorist killed 50 men, women and children - the victims aged between three and 77 years old - and left dozens injured in an attack that he live-streamed, sparking global revulsion.
The sombre ceremonies came a day after Ardern announced an immediate ban on assault rifles and military-style semi-automatic weapons, making good on a pledge to rid the country of the kinds of weapons used in the slaughter.
The move triggered renewed calls from leading American politicians for a similar response in the United States, which has suffered a stream of firearm massacres but left gun reform untouched.
Police and tradesmen had been working intensively in the hope of repairing the mosque's bullet-scarred and blood-spattered interior ahead of afternoon prayers. But authorities late Thursday announced prayers would be held in the park.
Prayers and pause
The national mourning and moment of silence were broadcast on television networks, radio and across multiple local media websites.'
"We are so happy that this prayer will be broadcast to the entire world so that everyone can be part of it," Mustafa Farouk, president of the Federation of Islamic Associations of New Zealand, said in a statement announcing the prayer session.
Burials of victims resume Friday morning, with a hearse pulling in to the cemetery on the eastern edge of Christchurch where many have already been buried.
Tarrant, a 28-year-old Australian national, posted a rambling "manifesto" saying he was motivated partly by a desire to stoke religious conflict between Islam and the West.
Kate Mills Workman, a 19-year-old student from Wellington, posted a selfie on Twitter showing her wearing a green headscarf. "Obviously this is all spurred on by the terrible tragedy in Christchurch but it's also a way of showing that any form of harassment or bigotry based on a symbol of religion is never okay," she told AFP. "As New Zealanders, we have to make a really strong stand."
The Muslim call to prayer relayed across New Zealand on Friday followed by two minutes of silence nationwide to mark a week since a white supremacist gunned down 50 people at two mosques in the city of Christchurch.
As the call was broadcast around the country, thousands of people - including Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern - stood silently in a park opposite the mosque where the killing began, as the country of 4.5 million came to a standstill.
The massacre by alleged shooter Brenton Tarrant has shocked a nation known for its tolerance. It has prompted horrified Kiwis to respond with vigils and performances of the traditional Maori haka dance, and to form lines behind Muslims to symbolically protect them while they pray.
An imam issued the call to regular Friday prayer at 1.30 pm (0030 GMT) with chants of "Allahu Akhbar" as thousands listened in Christchurch's Hagley Park across from the Al Noor Mosque.
The country then fell silent for two minutes, with public gatherings in Auckland, Wellington and other cities.
In neighbouring Australia, people stopped in the streets and in shops to mark the moment.
Al Noor imam Gamal Fouda then took to the lectern to denounce hatred, but also to praise the sense of Kiwi togetherness that the killings have sparked.
Unbreakable
"I look out and I see the love and compassion in the eyes of thousands of fellow New Zealanders and human beings from across the globe," he said. "This terrorist sought to tear our nation apart with an evil ideology that has torn the world apart. But, instead, we have shown that New Zealand is unbreakable."
Many women in attendance wore headscarves in solidarity with New Zealand's Muslim community.
Kirsty Wilkinson joined the throng at Hagley Park along with two female friends, all in make-shift hijabs. "I personally am doing this to knock down my walls of personal oblivion to the terror Muslim people feel every day, worrying about their safety," Wilkinson told AFP before the prayers began.
"I can take my scarf off if I feel afraid. They cannot. The message I want to send is that hate cannot win. We are all just people. What happened is not ok."
The terrorist killed 50 men, women and children - the victims aged between three and 77 years old - and left dozens injured in an attack that he live-streamed, sparking global revulsion.
The sombre ceremonies came a day after Ardern announced an immediate ban on assault rifles and military-style semi-automatic weapons, making good on a pledge to rid the country of the kinds of weapons used in the slaughter.
The move triggered renewed calls from leading American politicians for a similar response in the United States, which has suffered a stream of firearm massacres but left gun reform untouched.
Police and tradesmen had been working intensively in the hope of repairing the mosque's bullet-scarred and blood-spattered interior ahead of afternoon prayers. But authorities late Thursday announced prayers would be held in the park.
Prayers and pause
The national mourning and moment of silence were broadcast on television networks, radio and across multiple local media websites.'
"We are so happy that this prayer will be broadcast to the entire world so that everyone can be part of it," Mustafa Farouk, president of the Federation of Islamic Associations of New Zealand, said in a statement announcing the prayer session.
Burials of victims resume Friday morning, with a hearse pulling in to the cemetery on the eastern edge of Christchurch where many have already been buried.
Tarrant, a 28-year-old Australian national, posted a rambling "manifesto" saying he was motivated partly by a desire to stoke religious conflict between Islam and the West.
Kate Mills Workman, a 19-year-old student from Wellington, posted a selfie on Twitter showing her wearing a green headscarf. "Obviously this is all spurred on by the terrible tragedy in Christchurch but it's also a way of showing that any form of harassment or bigotry based on a symbol of religion is never okay," she told AFP. "As New Zealanders, we have to make a really strong stand."