McGill student wins Centre Culturel Islamique de Québec Memorial Award

McGill student wins Centre Culturel Islamique de Québec Memorial Award

McGill University graduate student Sarah Abou-Bakr is this year’s recipient of the Centre culturel islamique de Québec (CCIQ) Memorial Award, for her efforts to promote awareness and understanding of the Muslim experience in Quebec and Canada.

Each year, the CCIQ Memorial Award is awarded to a McGill student who shows commitment to fostering the inclusion of Muslims within the larger Quebecois and Canadian societies.

The award was established in 2018, in memory of the six men who were murdered and the 19 others injured on Jan. 29, 2017, shortly after Sunday evening prayers at the Quebec City mosque.

“My goal was for people with different backgrounds and identities to participate in exchanges with Muslims to eliminate stereotypes,” Abou-Bakr said.

From 2016 until last year, she headed MAC Give Montreal, a community organization encouraging young Muslims to volunteer and “become leaders of society through social engagement.”

She has also collaborated with the English Montreal School Board to give talks to students about the negative effects of Islamophobia in society.

Since 2019, she has worked with the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), currently serving as the Quebec Public Affairs Lead, engaging with government stakeholders as an advocate for better policy. She previously served as the NCCM’s Quebec Affairs Consultant and Quebec Advocacy Coordinator.

Abou-Bakr says that her biggest accomplishment was leading the NCCM’s 2020 and 2021 national Green Square Campaigns, which encouraged people to wear a green square to commemorate the anniversary of the Quebec City mosque shooting. In 2021, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the other federal party leaders were all seen wearing green squares.

The Green Square Campaigns also raise money for the families of the victims, as well as to rebuild the CCIQ mosque, which had not been repaired since the 2017 tragedy.

“I like to believe that laws such as Bill 21 are clear proof that there needs to be more understanding and more inclusion,” she says.

“I believe that one way to foster understanding is for our stories to be heard, and by telling mine, I am humanizing who I am, and humanizing people who look like me and share the same beliefs as me. That alone is an impact, because it makes people aware of the problems deeply embedded in our Canadian society that Muslims face every day because of lack of inclusion.”

(Source: McGill Reporter)