Two portraits at the Éva-Sénécal library exhibit on Quebec Muslims were vandalized. Image from CBC news
Quebec, (IINA) - Anti-Muslim messages were written on portraits displayed in an eastern townships library exhibition meant to showcase the everyday lives of Muslims in Quebec, Canada, CBC News reported.
The exhibition, at the Éva-Sénécal library in Sherbrooke, Quebec, aims to show the many ways Muslim citizens participate in Quebec society.
Two of these portraits and the book that accompanied the exhibition were vandalized with anti-Muslim messages a move denounced by organizers.
"We were shocked because this exhibition was meant to bring people together. When we see these insulting messages calling them terrorists, it's sad," University of Sherbrooke Professor Michèle Vatz Laaroussi said.
"It shows that this kind of exhibition is necessary, but it also shows us that we have not achieved our goals of breaking down prejudices, breaking down misconceptions and eradicating racism and Islamophobia. There is still much work to do," she lamented.
The Éva-Sénécal library filed a complaint with Sherbrooke police.
Both images were removed from the exhibition, which runs until the end of April.
SM/IINA
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