49 people to decide whether Quebec City’s Muslims get their own cemetery
SAINT-APOLLINAIRE, Que. — After six Muslim men were shot dead inside a Quebec City mosque last January, relations between Muslims and the rest of the community were excellent, said Mohamed Kesri — and then the cemetery issue came up.
Plans are underway to open the first Quebec City-area cemetery owned and operated by Muslims, but a handful of people oppose the project and triggered a referendum, which takes place Sunday.
“There are Catholic cemeteries, Protestant cemeteries, Jewish cemeteries — we aren’t inventing anything here,” said Kesri, the man mandated by the Quebec City mosque to lead the project. “We want to be like everybody else.”
The proposed burial site is located in Saint-Apollinaire, a town of 6,000 about 35 kilometres southwest of Quebec City.


