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Thousands Hold Vigil In Honour Of Toronto Victims

Thousands Hold Vigil In Honour Of Toronto Victims
  • PublishedApril 30, 2018

In honour of the 10 people who were mowed down by a van in Toronto, thousands have gathered at a vigil on Sunday night paying tribute to the deceased.

The victims, who ranged in age from 22 to 94, were killed when the suspect drove along a sidewalk in the north end of Canada’s largest city. Sixteen others were injured.

Ten candles, sheltered from the wind by tealight holders, were placed on a stage in memory of the eight women and two men struck by a rental van driven by Alek Minassian on Monday.

“Love for all, hatred for none,” was the message seen on large posters and blue T-shirts in the crowd, which included Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Governor General of Canada, Julie Payette — representing Queen Elizabeth II — Toronto’s Mayor John Tory and provincial heads of government also stood in the crowd, anonymous.

“Our sorrows are reflected in the eyes of the stranger beside to us. We stand together,” said Reverend Alexa Gilmore of the Windermere United Church, opening the somber event, which saw representatives from each of Toronto’s diverse range of religious communities offer tribute.

White roses
“Toronto has felt the pain of other cities,” affected by vehicle ramming attacks, such as London, Paris and Berlin, said Rabbi Barud Frydman.

The victims’ names — Mary Elizabeth Forsyth, Geraldine Brady, Dorothy Sewel, Beutis Renuka Amarasingha, Chung So-he, Anne-Marie D’Amico, Andrea Bradden, Kim Ji-hun, Kang Chul-min and Munir Abdo Habib Najjar — were recited, with white roses placed by each candle in their memory.

In the wake of the killings, police concluded that 25-year-old Minassian had targeted “predominantly women,” having posted a “cryptic” message on Facebook minutes before the attack.

In the post, Minassian praised mass killer Elliot Rodger — a 22-year-old American who murdered six people and then killed himself in California in 2014, and who had professed frustration over his virginity and women rejecting him.

The suspect’s post also referred to the “Incel Rebellion” — “incel” is short for “involuntarily celibate” and is often used in connection with online groups of sexually frustrated men who are known to rant against women.

Minassian was arrested seven minutes after the first call to an emergency hotline. He now faces 10 counts of premeditated murder, as well as the multiple attempted murder charges related to the injured survivors.

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