QUEBEC—Muslims in Quebec City are going to have their own cemetery after all.

The cemetery will be located on a parcel of land of about 6,000 square metres the city is selling for about $270,000 plus taxes, Mayor Régis Labeaume and members of the Muslim community said at a news conference Friday.

It is expected to be ready this fall.

The news came just three weeks after a zoning change proposal aimed at setting up a Muslim cemetery in Saint-Apollinaire, a town of around 6,000 southwest of Quebec City, was defeated in a referendum by a 19-16 margin. One ballot was rejected.

“It’s very disappointing,” Mohamed Labidi, president of the Centre Culturel Islamique de Québec, told the Star on July 16. “We feel ignored . . . the action in Saint-Apollinaire is against living together.”

The centre was the driving force behind the purchase of a plot of land beside an existing cemetery in Saint-Apollinaire earlier this year that members hoped would become their own.

Quebec City’s Muslims have been looking for a cemetery for two decades, but made a renewed push after they completed the payment for the city’s main mosque in 2011.

It was there last January that a gunman shot and killed six men in the main prayer hall and injured 19 others. The bodies were sent overseas and to Montreal for burial.

Labidi praised Labeaume for keeping his promise to forge ahead with plans for the cemetery.

“It’s a great day,” Labidi said. “It is a historic day for Quebec City. Today, we are reaping the benefits of 20 years of hard work.”

Boufeldja Benabdallah, interim co-ordinator of the cemetery project, also welcomed the news.

“Earlier, Mr. Labeaume was praising the land and its beauty,” he said. “I told him, ‘You’re going to push us to die earlier because we want to take advantage of the land.’ It’s just to say there is joy today and we are all going to die in peace and with respect.”

Benabdallah also stressed the importance of remembering those who died in the shooting in January.

“I’ll finish up with a fraternal thought for our six brothers who died in the tragedy last Jan. 29,” he said. “Today’s announcement will put a bit of balm on this tragedy.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also endorsed the decision.

“An important and courageous step for dignity and decency. Congratulations Mayor Labeaume for taking action,” Trudeau tweeted Friday.

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The GTA’s first Sunni-Shia cemetery was approved in March 2012. The Toronto Muslim Cemetery Corporation received a licence from the province, officially giving it the go-ahead to begin operations at Bethesda Sideroad and Leslie St. in Richmond Hill, the Star’s Noor Javed reported.

For years, Muslims in the GTA used non-denominational cemeteries, often compromising on certain religious requirements at the time of death, such as speedy burial. The new Muslim cemetery ensures that all graves are correctly aligned toward Mecca, as preferred, and service is available on weekends.

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