'We don't feel safe': Mosque shooting sends shock wave through Quebec Muslim community
Head of mosque in Montreal's West Island says it, too, has been target of Islamophobia
The deadly attack at a mosque in Quebec City is rippling through members of Quebec's Muslim community, many of whom say they no longer feel safe.
Mehmet Deger'sown mosquein Dorval, inMontreal's West Island, has been targeted a number of times.
Windows have been broken, someone shot at his vehicle, and recently, he filed a police report when it wasstickeredby anti-Islamic propaganda.
"We put six cameras on our mosque and we still don't feel safe," Deger told CBC Montreal's Daybreak.
"Our lives are in danger."
Six people were killed and more than a dozen woundedinthe shootingduringevening prayers Sunday, in what Quebec Premier PhilippeCouillard described as a "murderous act directed at a specific community."
Despite taking extra security measures, Deger said there's no preparation that will prevent someone from attacking if they want to attack.
"If a person is going to attack, they come and attack," he said.
Islamophobia on rise, activist says
The leader of theAssociation of Muslim and Arabs for a Secular Quebec,HarounBouazzi, said he was shocked but not surprised by the attack.
Bouazzi, whohimself has been the target of death threats,said Islamaphobia has been a major problem, with mosques across the province subject to vandalism.
"We have been seeing a huge amount of hatred against Muslim minorities here in Quebec," he said. "All of the mosques have been subject of hate."
Bouazzi said the tone and tenor of thatdebate helped stoke fear of Muslims.
The CentreCulturelIslamiquedeQubec, the site of Sunday's shooting, hasbeen the target of xenophobic messaging and vandalism in the past.
Last July, in the middle of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan,a gift-wrapped pig's headwas left at the front door with a note saying, "bon apptit."
'Your worst nightmares'
But even if vandalism is a fairly common occurrence in the province and across Canada, the president of the Canadian Muslim Forum said he never imagined anything like this.
"We know that Islamophobia exists in the country and in Quebec, but to the extent of having people being shot and killed in cold blood . The shock wave is hitting the community."
Montreal police have already reached out to leaders from the Muslim community to offer any additional support. Patrol cars were dispatched overnight to visit area mosques as a preventative measure.
A team of advisers, including police officers and civilians, will be at a centralized command post to answer questions and concerns from the Montreal Muslim community on Monday.