Canada's Midnight Sun Mosque
The fascinating story of the world’s northernmost mosque, The Midnight Sun Mosque, is inspiring Canadian filmmakers to turn it into a documentary.
“When we heard about the story of the mosque project, we immediately thought it was unusual and would definitely make a great story for a documentary,” filmmaker Saira Rahman told IQRA.ca.
Saira and Nilufer Rahman are making a documentary about the Midnight Sun Mosque in Inuvik in Canada’s Northwest Territories.
Titled “Arctic Mosque”, the documentary will tell the story of the 4,000km journey the mosque took in 2010 from the prairie city of Winnipeg in the province of Manitoba to Inuvik, the most northern town in Canada’s Arctic.
“Actually, two days before the mosque set out on its 4,000 km journey, Hussain Guisti, the general manager of the Zubaidah Tallab Foundation (the Canadian charity that sponsored the mosque building), asked us if we’d be interested in making a film about the “Arctic Mosque,” said Saira.
The small Muslim community in Inuvik could not afford to build a new mosque as prices for labor and materials in the arctic region are much higher than in southern parts of Canada.
The Zubaidah Tallab Foundation, a Manitoba-based Islamic charity, stepped in and raised funds to build the mosque.
The group also found a supplier of prefabricated buildings in Manitoba that shipped the building to Inuvik for half the price of building a mosque from scratch in the town.
The epic journey of small prefabricated mosque grabbed international attention as it slowly made its way, by road and on a river barge, to its final destination.
Inuvik is in Canada’s Northwest Territories and has a population of 3,600 people, about a hundred of who are Muslims.
Muslims have been migrating to smaller resource towns, such as Inuvik, in search of jobs and hoping for a better quality of life.
According to the latest census numbers, the Muslim population of the Northwest Territories is growing at a rate of 300 percent every decade,
Due to its northern location, Inuvik is called the ‘Light of the Midnight Sun’ as it experiences an average of 56 days of continuous sunlight every summer and, for almost 30 days, it is blanketed in complete darkness every winter.
The Muslim community in Inuvik follows the prayer and fasting times of the city of Edmonton.
New Perception
The filmmakers are hoping to capture the drama of the mosque’s odyssey and change the perception about Muslims in a world that often responds to mosques with fear and controversy.
“We hope that people who watch the film will discover that this documentary is so much more than a story about the building of a mosque,” Saira told IQRA.ca.
“It’s about the forging of a unique community and we’re not just talking about a unique Muslim community.”
Saira says that the film will show the impact the mosque has made on the small town.
“The Midnight Sun Mosque, as it’s been named, has impacted the entire town of Inuvik and put it on the map, so to speak.
“We hope viewers will be inspired by the positive energy and community spirit that we witnessed while filming the documentary.”
The documentary is being co-produced by Buffalo Gal Pictures and Snow Angel Films, which is owned by the two sisters, Nilufer and Saira Rahman.
The sisters are currently in post production, going through 120 hours of footage, while seeking funding for the documentary.
They have launched an online campaign and the response has been encouraging.
“After only three days of posting our trailer on YouTube, we got over 10,000 views,” said Saira.
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Support the Film: http://www.indiegogo.com/arcticmosque