Al-Noor Mosque with its majestic golden dome and the cordon of flowers along Hagley Park was at the heart of the Christchurch terrorist attack. A smaller heart beats in a humbler part of the Garden City. The Linwood Islamic Centre is a simple weatherboard house next to a liquor store across from the Eastgate Mall. Further down the gravel driveway and past an All Blacks flag, the nondescript mosque has its tribute flowers too. They are tucked into the shoe shelves.
A multicoloured chair by the entrance looks more like retro chic than religious decor. “It belonged to Mum,” says Angela Armstrong, patting the patchwork leather. Before March last year, the 45-year-old anthropology student at Canterbury University who lives an hour’s drive from Christchurch with her family had never set foot inside a New Zealand mosque. Since then she has been retracing her mother’s colourful life to make sense of her leap into faith.
Linda Armstrong converted to Islam in 2011. Not out of devotion to a man, but because she was volunteering at the refugee resettlement centre in Mangere where she made new friends and sponsored Syrian refugees. “Mum was a rebel,” says her daughter. “She didn’t really like wearing a hijab. Later, she just wore a hat instead.”
This morning, Angela wears a cotton scarf around her face to meet Alabi Lateef, the Nigerianborn imam of Linwood. He hugs her inside the sparsely furnished prayer room. It has been repainted after the attack. “You’re always on our mind,” he says. “You are part of us.”
This story is from the April 2020 edition of NEXT.
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This story is from the April 2020 edition of NEXT.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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