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Montreal

Quebecers respond en masse to knit tuques for Syrian refugees

Less than two weeks after launching a call to knit winter hats for arriving Syrian refugees, Danielle Ltourneau has been inundated with responses as well as donations from across Quebec.

Response to campaign spreads across Canada, donations keep coming

People have been posting photos of their freshly knit hats to be given to Syrian families coming to Quebec. (EVknits/Facebook)

Less than two weeks after launching a call to knit winter hats for arriving Syrian refugees, Danielle Ltourneau has been inundated with responsesand donationsfrom people all over Quebec.

The province will be welcoming 3,650 Syrians before the end of the year.

Ltourneau launched the Facebook page 25,000 tuques, asking people to knit hats and write welcome messages for the new arrivals.

More than 7,000 people have liked the page and many are posting photos of their newly knittuques.

The campaign has also taken on a life of its own on Twitter.

Groups of friends are also knitting together and posting pictures on Facebook.

"Spent the weekend knitting tuques for refugees. I'm on my seventh in four days," posted Heidi Jutras. "Every time I finish a tuque, I have a big smile on my face."

Ltourneau has rented a post-office boxin order to receive the hats andhas also secured drop-off locations around the province.

And why tuques in particular?

"Each baby born in a hospital in Quebec receives a tuque. We feel it's only normal that refugees would also receive one as a symbol of their new life in Quebec,"Ltourneau writes on her site.

Tuque campaign sparks interest

Ltourneau's group, 25,000 tuques, has inspired other knitting enthusiasts across Canada to get out theirneedles and balls of yarn.

A Facebook page called A Warm Welcome for Refugees was just created Wednesday nightin Ontario.

"I was inspired by 25,000 tuques in Quebec to help out local refugees and thought we should do the same here in Ontario!"

"It's mighty cold here in Canada, let's all do our part and try to make this transition as comfortable as possible," thegroup's page says. "Who's with me!?"

Have you donated? Show us your tuques! Submit them onFacebook orTwitter, or email us at webquebec@cbc.ca.