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Sydney mosques remember ‘history-maker’ Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah

Sydney mosques have commemorated slain ‘history maker’ Hassan Nasrallah as a ‘martyr and jihadi’ whose blood had not been wasted as he rose to ‘dignity’ | WATCH THE VIDEO

Protesters march through the streets of Sydney CBD waving pictures of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah who was killed in an IDF strike. Picture: Jeremy Piper
Protesters march through the streets of Sydney CBD waving pictures of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah who was killed in an IDF strike. Picture: Jeremy Piper

Sydney mosques have remembered slain Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah as no normal “martyr and jihadi” but a “history-maker” whose blood had not been “wasted”, at commemoration services on Monday night.

It comes as the international and domestic fallout from the terrorist group leader’s death escalated, with the Israeli military confirming a targeted ground invasion had begun in southern Lebanon and as Australian police rushed to investigate protesters displaying Hezbollah flags at rallies on Sunday.

Three Sydney mosques across the last 48 hours have held commemoration ceremonies for Nasrallah: Kingsgrove’s Al Rahman Mosque – also known as Masjid Arrahman – the Sayeda Zainab Centre in Banksia and Al Zahra masjid in Arncliffe.

The Australian can reveal that at Al Rahman, which has routinely held commemoration services for slain Hezbollah terrorists this year, the mosque’s leaders told hundreds of attendees that Nasrallah was a “supporter of the oppressed” who had left a “timeless legacy” that would be followed by generations to come.

Sydney mosques commemorate 'history-maker' Hassan Nasrallah

“When martyrs depart, they leave behind a timeless legacy of good deeds and reputation that (forges) a path for future generations who will carry forward the ideology and movement, and will shake the thrones of injustice everywhere,” one leader said in Arabic and translated by The Australian.

“This is what our martyrs would have wanted so that their blood is not shed in vain. They rose up for our dignity, for our home, for our holy sites, for our honour, and for fighting against the invasion (against) our culture and military.”

Mourners gather at Al Rahman mosque in Kingsgrove on Monday after the death of Hezbollah leader. Picture: Jeremy Piper
Mourners gather at Al Rahman mosque in Kingsgrove on Monday after the death of Hezbollah leader. Picture: Jeremy Piper

The Monday night service was so popular that mosque-goers were forced to watch proceedings outside and were told that Nasrallah had no equal and that becoming a martyr for the sake of Allah was the “path”.

“If (a person) is killed for the sake of Allah, there is no righteousness above him,” one leader said.

Concurrently, a few suburbs away in Banksia, the Sayeda Zainab Centre also hosted a service, with its leaders calling Nasrallah’s death a “painful tragedy” and that the community was “indebted” to him and Hezbollah’s other martyrs.

“The blood of our martyrs are a testament of honour and we owe them all a great debt,” one of the centre’s leaders said, adding that the centre was “grateful” to the slain Hezbollah chief.

He called Nasrallah’s death one of the “greatest tragedies” and that it had left the centre and its community “upset”.

“We’re not talking about a normal person (Nasrallah), we are not talking about a (normal) jihadi leader,” he said, adding that the Hezbollah chief’s strength and dignity was shown by Israel only being able to kill him with 80 tonnes of “bunker busters”.

“We are talking about a man who entered history.”

All three mosques are made of predominantly members from the Lebanese Shia community and have all held Hezbollah commemorations since the onset of the war last October.

In October, Al Rahman held services across the month for at least four Hezbollah fighters, with the mosque’s high-profile sheik, Youssef Nabha, vowing to continue commemorating slain fighters.

In August, the Sayeda Zainab Centre hosted Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi for a film about Palestine. The centre’s social media pages have also depicted children wearing clothes embroidered with Hezbollah symbols.

On Tuesday, Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said he didn’t “understand the reason” for why memorial services were held for slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah at several mosques in Sydney on Monday evening.

“Well, the government doesn’t mourn him for one minute,” he told ABC RN when asked whether the services were “appropriate”.

“Not for one minute. But I’ll tell you, there are civilians who have been killed who we mourn. There are people who have nothing to do with terrorism who were alive a week ago and are dead now. And we certainly, certainly mourn them.”

Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson said Australia had a “homegrown extremism problem” following elements of protests and memorials that glorified the terrorist group and Nasrallah.

He said the “sad truth” of the protests was likely that “the vast majority of people at these protests are Australian citizens and what we have here is a homegrown extremism problem, not only an imported extremism problem”.

It comes as pictures surfaced of a toddler at Sunday’s protest in Sydney dressed in a Hezbollah T-shirt.

National Council of Jewish Women Australia president Lynda Ben-Menashe said: “Immersing children in a visual and verbal culture of genocidal hate and violence is a form of child abuse which every parent in Australia should condemn”.

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/sydney-mosques-remember-historymaker-hezbollah-chief-hassan-nasrallah/news-story/3cf4e51c6c654f30aa6c9cc190d3d0ef