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Nova Scotia

Nova Scotians give 'warm blanket of pure love' to refugee parents of 7 children killed in fire

There has been an outpouring of community support for a Syrian refugee family who lost seven children in a house fire Tuesday in Halifax.

A card-writing campaign is the latest initiative launched in support of the Barho family

Five of the Barho children with their parents, in an undated photo posted to Facebook by the Halifax mosque the family attended. Seven children in total died in a house fire earlier this week. (Ummah Masjid/Facebook)

Heartbroken Nova Scotianslooking to show support for a Halifax-area family whose seven children died Tuesday in a house fire are being invited to send words of encouragement to the survivors througha card-writing campaign.

Local greeting-card makerHalifax Paper Heartsisoffering free cards to send notes to the parents,KawtharandEbraheimBarho.

It's just one ofa number of initiatives started in memory of the Barho children, who ranged in age from three months to 14 years old.

Several shops in the Halifax area are expected todistributethe cards on Saturday, including Fiddleheads in Bedford.

Card-maker Halifax Paper Hearts designed and donated a card for people to send notes to the Barho family. (Facebook)

"What I ultimately wanted to give these parents was love,"Nancy Rector, owner of the kids shop, said Thursday in a Facebook post.

"I want to surround them with a huge warm blanket of pure love to comfort them as they try to heal. The best way I can think of doing this is to send them a personal note of support," said Rector.

"Maybe one person doesn't sound like much. but if a hundred people do it, they could see that even though they're far from their original home/family, they also have a family here."

TheBarhoscame to Nova Scotia in 2017 as Syrian refugees, settling inElmsdalebefore moving to the Halifax neighbourhood ofSpryfield. The family was planning to move back toElmsdalein the coming weeks.

Ebraheimremained in a medically induced coma in hospital Thursday.Kawthar, whowas not physically injured in the fire, has asked for her mother and brother, who are in Lebanon,to be allowed to immigrate to Canada to be with her in Halifax.

The card from Paper Hearts depicts seven teddy bears representing each of the Barho children. People have beenplacingteddy bears on their porchesas a show ofsupport for thefamily.

The Gargan family paid respects to the Barho family on Wednesday. Many people have been leaving flowers and stuffed animals outside the home in memory of the children. (Robert Short/CBC)

As of Friday, thousands of people had also donatednearly more than $500,000as part ofan online fundraiser organized by the Imam Council of Halifax andHantsEast Assisting Refugees Team, whichsponsored the family.

It's the second largest CanadianGoFundMecampaign in recent years, said the crowdfunding platform.Afundraiser following the Humboldt Broncos tragedy in Saskatchewan last year raised more than $15 million.

Donations are also being accepted for the Barhos at CUA banking branches. As well, anumber of local businesseshave pledged to donate profits to the family.

The municipality of East Hants, where theBarhofamily originally settled upon their arrival to Canada, has planned a vigil Friday at 7 p.m. local time at the Riverview United Church in Elmsdale.

Rev. Catherine MacDonald leads the congregation at Riverview United Church in Elmsdale, N.S. (CBC)

The church's minister, Rev. Catherine MacDonald, said the vigil will include a speech from an imam and the group that sponsored the family as refugees, as well as a community choralperformance of This Little Light of Mine and Let There be Peace on Earth.

MacDonald said people inElmsdalearefeeling shock, grief and helplessness.

"There's a lot of 'if onlys' if only they had moved back [to Elmsdale], if only they had never left, those kinds of reactions. It just seems so heartbreaking that they came from a country fraught with war to a relatively safe country of ours and then have died so tragically."

MacDonald said she hopes the vigil will remind grieving residents that they are not alone.

"When one hurts, so many more of us hurt, too, and so as we can share collective sorrow we can share collective resiliency," she said.

With files from Mainstreet