
Play taking stage in Hamilton based on stories of real and 'tragic' impact of Islamophobia in Ontario
A local Muslim organization is aiming to help people "understand the impact of hate," while highlighting the case of the killing of a Muslim family in London, Ont., four years ago.
Mishka Social Services, a group that supports Muslim newcomers in Hamilton, is hosting a free theatre event on Friday at the Zoetic Theatre exploring the consequences of Islamophobia. The event will include a panel discussion, a play and music.
"I feel like this gives an alternative that's less tense, less confrontational, less controversial, really, to come together and show that we stand against hate in all forms," said Mishka's executive director, Omar Mahamed.
Sofi Asali was in charge of writing and directing the play, which she called Our London Family.
"I think my biggest hope for the play is that people walk away seeing more in common with the Muslim characters than different," she told CBC Hamilton.
Our London Family is described by Asali as a piece of fiction inspired by what happened to members of the Afzaal family.
Yumnah Afzaal, 15, her parents Madiha Salman, 44, and Salman Afzaal, 46, and grandmother Talat Afzaal, 74, were intentionally struck and killed while out on an evening stroll on June 6, 2021 in London. A young boy who was seriously injured was the sole survivor.
The man who killed them is serving a life sentence after he was convicted of terrorism, four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder during a trial in Windsor, Ont., in 2023.
"The goal [of the play] was to create a sense of a living memorial through people," said Asali.
Mahamed said the event will also be a good opportunity to think about Islamophobia in Hamilton.
He said tensions have been heightened in the community and bled into his work, he said, where he recently had to deal with the case of a family that was targeted in Hamilton, a first for him.
Hamilton has a Muslim population of around 38,000, according to the 2021 census.
Mahamed added that the Muslim community has been feeling "worried," "scared," and "a bit threatened," as a result of Israel's ongoing bombing of Gaza.
The Jewish community has had some similar experiences, he said, and both communities have seen increased security in synagogues and Mosques in Hamilton as preventative measures.
For him, the Friday event will be a "good way to let people know we're here."
A play about trauma and healing
Asali is from South Carolina but is currently based in Toronto. As a University of Toronto cinema studies graduate, her work has largely looked at mental health in diverse communities with a focus on the intersection of culture, religion and health.
As a second-generation Syrian American, she said she saw a lot of herself while working on the play. Asali said despite not being Muslim, she has experienced Islamophobia.
"The thing about hate is that it usually comes from a place of paranoia and not education, and so I felt like I could really empathize with what I was going to write," said Asali.
The play is told from the perspective of the surviving family member, at an older age, and explores "how to remain present in times of pain," she said.
Mahamed said he expects the audience will feel deep empathy for the main character and get a close-up look at how traumatic these experiences can be, but also at how healing can begin.
"It's shining a positive light on a dark, tragic topic," he said.
Asali said there was great care put into "balancing fact and fiction."
"It's about the emotional truth of what happened while maintaining like the privacy and wishes of like real family," she said.
The play cast around 15 people between the ages of 13 and 30 with a diverse range of experience.
Raising awareness a different way
Before the play, four speakers will take the stage for a panel discussion looking at the impact of Islamophobia on individuals and families.
The panel will include various Muslim leaders and advocates, including Mohammed Baobaid, executive director at the Muslim Resource Centre for Social Support and Integration in London, and Shahina Siddiqui, executive director of the Islamic Social Services Association.
The event was funded by the Canada Race Relations Foundation, said Mahamed, so he felt like it would be in "bad taste" to charge people who want to attend.
He said the event is aimed at anyone who wants to attend and is hoping for a diverse audience with a mix of Muslims and others.
Mahamed said the event could be a good opportunity for people to engage with the topic of Islamophobia, in a different way than attending a protest or a march.
"We're looking to raise awareness of how harmful discrimination, hate and violence can be. And for people to also recognize that we could raise awareness in different mediums," he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

CBC
34 minutes ago
- CBC
Bullet holes and police raids: Former real estate agent investigated for allegedly subletting to criminals
A former Lower Mainland real estate agent is under investigation by B.C.'s real estate regulator after his name allegedly turned up last year as the 'tenant' for multiple properties linked to a major Vancouver Police Department (VPD) gang investigation. According to documents obtained by CBC News, VPD investigators contacted the B.C. Financial Services Authority (BCFSA) when Qun (Michael) Li's name surfaced during raids on Vancouver and Burnaby suites linked to a Quebec-based criminal group trying to establish a foothold in Vancouver. A search warrant claims the Burnaby resident — who also works as a driving coach — was also listed as the tenant on record in a separate RCMP investigation related to a suite where the actual occupant allegedly fired a stray bullet fired through a neighbour's wall. And at least five homeowners have turned to the courts to evict Li from their properties in the past year — including two landlords who complained their suites were rented without their knowledge to sex workers. "I feel stressed every time I think about his issues," says Richard Zhou, an apartment owner who got a B.C. Supreme Court order to remove Li's possessions from his Burnaby condo last year after taking him to the Residential Tenancy Branch (RTB). "I'm helpless. The police cannot help me. The strata manager cannot help me. I think the landlord in Canada is on the weak side. We don't have too much power to kick the tenants out," said Zhou. 'A possible co-opted realtor' Li told CBC News in a brief phone call he was "not interested" in commenting on the allegations spelled out in a warrant to search his phone obtained in March. The document says the 45-year-old — who was first licensed in July 2015 — is suspected of breaching B.C.'s Real Estate Services Act by bringing the real estate industry into disrepute and failing to report his rental management property services. He has not been charged with any criminal offences or any offences under the Real Estate Services Act. The BCFSA's investigation began with an email from the VPD's organized crime section last August. "I have been made aware of a possible co-opted realtor whose name has popped up in a large drug trafficking investigation involving an organized gang originating out of Quebec but has quickly established themselves here in the Lower Mainland," the email said. The court documents say police provided two further emails "which identified six specific properties related to either VPD or Burnaby Royal Canadian Mounted Police related drug investigations." "Qun Li was listed as the tenant on record at each of the six properties at the time of the police search warrant executions for the investigations." Vancouver police publicized raids last year on the rental properties in Burnaby and Vancouver as part of an investigation into Zone 43 — a Quebec-based gang accused of drug trafficking in the Downtown Eastside. Five men were arrested after a 14-month investigation and seizures yielding $150,000 cash, two handguns and 24 kilograms of fentanyl, cocaine and methamphetamine. The BCFSA search warrant claims "a well known organized crime figure and drug trafficker was living" in one of the suites. Another was allegedly being used to stash drugs. The court documents claim the actual owners of the suites either believed Li would be living in their units or that he would act as a real estate agent to rent them out. The owner of a property in Burnaby where VPD allegedly found firearms, currency and evidence of drug trafficking claimed Li "lied to him about living with his cousin" after responding to an advertisement on a Chinese website. The search warrant says five men ended up living in the unit instead. A silver bullet fragment 'underneath his bed' The subject of a Burnaby RCMP file linked to another of Li's rentals was in provincial court in Vancouver this week, making an appearance from his new home: North Fraser Pretrial Centre. Jordy Engelo faces charges — including careless use or storage of a firearm — in connection with an RCMP investigation into a report of suspicious circumstances, made by the tenant of a neighbouring suite who noticed bullet holes in his unit's walls. CBC News has obtained a copy of a separate search warrant connected with that investigation, which claims the neighbour "woke up, went to the living room and located a hole in the wall." "Upon further investigation [the neighbour] discovered that the keyboard of his computer had some impact damage (4 keys), and the bedroom wall had been penetrated through," the search warrant says. "[He] inspected the bedroom and later located a silver bullet fragment, on the floor, underneath his bed." Police detained Engelo, who was allegedly found in the company of a 17-year-old female, who was released into the custody of her legal guardian. Engelo's bail hearing is scheduled for next week. Real estate agent Weny Wu told CBC News she rented the suite after seeing Li's business card. "He signed an agreement and he said he wanted to move in with his nephew, who's coming to Vancouver," Wu said. "Later, when something happened — the police incident happened to this unit — we finally realized that he did not actually live there by himself. He let it to other people." 'I decided to sell' Apart from the files involving police activity, five separate homeowners have taken Li to the RTB in the past year — resulting in decisions against him that landlords have enforced through B.C. Supreme Court orders. Like many of the people who rented to Li, Zhou claimed he advertised his suite on a Chinese language social media site. He said he did not give Li permission to rent the unit to someone else. The BCFSA's search warrant says Zhou told investigators Li "immediately sublet the suite to a prostitute for the first month." Another of the homeowners who went to the courts, Pedro Chie, told CBC News a sex worker also appeared to be entertaining clients out of the Whalley condo Li rented from him in Surrey, B.C. Chie said he suspected as much after being called multiple times to fix a washing machine that wasn't actually broken and finding evidence a female smoker was living in his suite — not the former real estate agent. According to an RTB decision, Li fought Chie, arguing that he "told the Landlord at the start of the agreement that they would have friends staying in the rental unit." But the RTB sided with Chie after Li admitted he was "living elsewhere on a periodic basis" — leading to the conclusion the unit was being sublet contrary to the rental agreement. "I decided to sell the apartment," Chie says. "All is messy. I have to pay money to clean up everything." Zhou says the whole experience has also cost him dearly both emotionally and financially — leaving him with $2,400 worth of fines levied by the strata after a constant string of complaints. He says he now prefers to rent to non-Canadians, because "they want to behave better." 'I am sorry' An internet search of Li's phone number turns up old advertisements for apartment rentals on Chinese websites and a posting on a John Howard Society affordable housing list from 2016 for a shared space. According to the BCFSA search warrant, Li surrendered his real estate licence within days of being contacted by the regulator in early March. "I am sorry I did not [report] my rental apartments to my manager, as the apartment is under my personal name," Li allegedly wrote in an email to the BCFSA's investigator. "I am willing to return and suspend my realtor licence to BCFSA from today. I suffered lots of stress recently and in the last few years, because some people I subleased did not pay rent or caused damages or other problem." The BCFSA confirmed in an email that its investigation into Li's activities is still ongoing. The regulator says that under the terms of B.C.'s Real Estate Services Act, former licensees can still be sanctioned for activities that took place while they were in good standing. The search warrant also includes a copy of Li's apology to his managing broker, who wrote a statement explaining that the company's real estate agents work on "an independent contractor basis."


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Crash in Niagara Falls leaves 1 person dead
Police say one person is dead following a crash in Niagara Falls on June 12, 2025. Police say a crash in Niagara Falls late Thursday night has left one person dead. It happened at the intersection of Thorold Stone and Dorchester roads just before 11:30 p.m., Niagara Regional Police said in a post on social media. Images from the scene show that a motorcycle collided with a vehicle at the intersection. One person was pronounced dead, but police did not say which vehicle the deceased was driving. Collision reconstruction and forensic units have been deployed to the scene. Road closures are in effect and drivers are asked to use alternate routes.


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Police warn of potential sexual exploitation as visitors arrive for Grand Prix weekend
Passengers arriving in Montreal's Trudeau Airport Thursday were met with officers to prevent criminal activities related to sexual exploitation for Grand Prix. Passengers arriving in Montreal's Trudeau Airport Thursday were met with a joint force of officers from Montreal police, provincial police and the RCMP hoping to prevent criminal activity related to sexual exploitation during Grand Prix weekend. The event has been tied to a rise in incidents of prostitution and human trafficking, according to RCMP spokesperson Martina Pillarova, so officers set up kiosks at the arrivals area to intercept passengers as they disembark from their flight. 'The authorities take this opportunity to reiterate that the purchase of sexual services is a crime at all times. Clients should be aware that the vast majority of women are forced to do so. By purchasing sexual services, clients contribute to the financing of sexual exploitation networks,' Pillarova said in a statement to CTV. Meanwhile Montreal's airport authority also put posters in its washrooms with information for those who may be a victim of trafficking The airport awareness campaign was applauded by Jennie-Laure Sully, coordinator of the Concertation de Luttes Contre l'Exploitation Sexuelle (CLES), but she says the problem goes far beyond Grand Prix weekend. 'It's the beginning of the season. Sexual exploitation will be a problem during this weekend, but it's also a problem throughout the year,' she said, adding that younger victims are being lured online with promises of a glamourous lifestyle. Sully said it's important that parents have conversations with their kids and look for any warning signs. She said the organization has helped parents whose daughters disappeared during Grand Prix weekend. 'Very often what they'll say is 'she told me that she was going just for the weekend, for a hostess job, for a private party.'' For anyone with information regarding suspected cases of human trafficking or requiring assistance, the RCMP said to call the Canadian Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-833-900-1010, which operates 24/7 in 200 languages. All calls are confidential.