Afzaal family's legacy lives on in special mural to mark 1 year since London, Ont., attack
Special anniversary mural is part of events to honour Muslim family killed June 6, 2021
A year ago today, London, Ont., and the world were shocked to learn a vehicle attack on the Afzaal family while they were out for a walk had left four of them dead.
Now, some of those closest to 15-year-old Yumnah Afzaal have created a mural inspired by her love of art in a project that has helped them heal. It will be revealed later Monday at the site of the attack, at the intersection of Hyde Park Road and South Carriage Road.
Yumnah was the artist behind a mural of her own the summer before the Grade 10 student, her parents, Salman Afzaal and Madiha Salman, and her grandmother, Talat Afzaal, were killed in the June 6, 2021, attack that police have said was motivated by hate. Yumnah's brother, nine years old at the time, survived.
The man charged with murder and related terror offences is expected to go to trial in 2023.
In the meantime, people in London are doing their part to honour the Afzaals on this first anniversary while raising awareness about Islamophobia.
Aya Abdul Hamid said her friend Yumnah's original mural was a way for her to leave her legacy at the London Islamic School, where she'd studied and her creation now has a home.
Aya said she got involved in the new art project as a way to continue Yumnah's legacy and "leave a statement of the family."
"It's definitely been a way of healing after it happened," said the 16-year-old. "As someone who is young ... you can never be prepared for something like this in the way that it came and how sudden it was."
Aya said "continuing on what [Yumnah] probably would have wanted to continue on" also helped in the healing process.
A community effort
The new mural is a collaboration with family and friends of the Afzaals, as well as:
- Muslim artist Wajeha Chams.
- Indigenous artist Mike Cywink.
- The Muslim Resource Centre for Social Support and Integration.
- The City of London, which funded the project.
Another of Yumnah's close friends, Huda Sallam, who was involved in the mural project, said she offered her opinions and "emotional support" to Yumnah when she was working on her original mural. Huda also tried to bring Yumnah's artistic sensibilities to the new piece.
"I definitely tried to see it from her eye," explained the 15-year-old.
Huda said she hasn't been able to go to the intersection where the attack took place, but the mural may change that.
"Having something as beautiful as that sitting there, I think it'll be easier for me to go back every now and then and just kind of remember her.
"And I think that a lot of the friends and families are going to get together at some point to go and just sit there and just, you know, remember how this mural came about, and have those memories and thoughts within it."
The mural's unveiling is part of five days of events, which started Friday and end Wednesday, that were organized. They also include a vigil, a march and workshops.
Aya hopes the mural will help people see how the family lived instead of how their lives were taken away.
She also stressed that the Afzaals were much more than a family who were killed because of their religious beliefs.
"The whole family was just such a peaceful family, so calming … and I feel like they were so understanding and so generous in the way they were and the way they carried themselves as humans. And I know their parents raised Yumnah and [her brother] very well. Very, very well."