CBC News – Muhammad Asghar kneeled on the floor alongside a couple of dozen fellow Muslims last week silently praying. When he looked up and turned his head, he smiled at the Anglican priest kneeling behind him.
“To my amazement, he came and joined me in the prayer,” Asghar said.
A Christian clergyman kneeling inside a mosque would normally be an unusual occurrence, but in Leamington — the small farming community in southwestern Ontario — it’s become a common sight.
Asghar and many others regularly pray at St. John the Evangelist Anglican Church, where the Muslim community has set up a mosque, after a deal worked out between the two religious communities.
The emerging relationship between the groups can set an example for the entire community, said Taha Halabi, who also regularly attends prayer.
“We tried to show the community in Leamington, and everywhere in Ontario, that Muslims and Christians are hand to hand,” he said.
The arrangement started in September when the church invited Syrian refugees to its annual picnic. Everyone who showed up liked the community hall, which is regularly rented out to a host of different groups.
At the time, Rev. Andrew Wilson offered the space to be used as a mosque after learning the Muslim community had been renting a tiny location that was not big enough for their needs.
By the month of Ramadan, which started in late May, the hall was rented to serve as a mosque, and hundreds came to worship during the time of fasting. The mosque now regularly has 30 to 40 people coming in for the prayer service.
“We cannot gain peace in this world, until we can live together with one another in one community,” she said. “That’s just reaching out and saying here we are together — brothers and sisters of this Earth, regardless of religion, creed, colour, it doesn’t matter.” Muslims at the facility tell CBC News.