The Guest House
A year on, how do Muslim New Zealanders make sense of the Christchurch mosque attacks? Journalist and poet Mohamed Hassan looks at the fractures left after March 15.
Navigation for The Guest House
Mohamed Hassan appears thanks to support from Middle East Eye.
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Stage 5 - The path to acceptance
13 Mar 2020And finally, hopefully, acceptance. Sheikh Gamal Fouda, the imam of Al Noor mosque, traveled the world offering a message of peace. But he found his own inner peace here at home. Read more Audio
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Stage 4 - A global depression
12 Mar 2020After bargaining, the depression. It was felt by Muslims even half a world away, who experienced the 'vicarious trauma' and thought maybe they were right to worry about their safety after all. Read more Audio
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Stage 3: Bargaining to belong
11 Mar 2020After anger comes bargaining. 'If only we had taken better care of our Muslim neighbours'. But we hadn't and many Māori stepped up, drawing on their own experience of exclusion. Read more Audio
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Stage 2: Who gets to be angry?
10 Mar 2020After denial comes anger. Guled Mire became a spokesperson for his community after the mosque attacks, but when he showed anger at the death of innocents, he found the tide shifting. Read more Audio
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Stage 1: Denial at the graveside
9 Mar 2020Mohamed Hassan works through the five stages of grief felt by Muslim New Zealanders after the March 15 attacks. Stage one is denial; he talks to Hassan Raslan, who spent three days helping with the… Read more Audio
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Trailer: The Guest House
3 Mar 2020Journalist and poet Mohamed Hassan shares stories, poetry and conversations with members of the Muslim community as he tries to come to terms with March 15 mosque attacks in Christchurch one year on.
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The Guest House
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