
Outpouring of funds for Farah’s funeral a ‘translation’ of community’s love for him, says Hassan Ibrahim
Members of Toronto’s Somali community are reeling from the loss of a 24-year-old fatally shot in Scarborough, who is being remembered as having a kind and easy-going personality, always with a smile on his face.
More than $22,000 has been raised online to cover funeral expenses for Samatar Farah, who was found dead in a parking lot near Chester Le Boulevard and Morecambe Gate in the early hours of Saturday morning.
That, says Hassan Ibrahim of the Abu Huraira Center mosque where Farah used to pray, is a reflection of how loved he was in the community.
“It’s truly a translation of what kind of person he was, how people came together … The Somali community in general is a close-knit community that support each other … But it’s also testimony to him,” said Ibrahim, who said he’d known Farah for at least the last eight years.

Concerns over term ‘targeted’
“Every person that I spoke to just felt the pain, and it’s just a way for them to do something and translate that.”
It’s been more 48 hours since police were called to the Victoria Park and Finch Avenue East neighbourhood after gunshots rang out around 1:30 a.m. Saturday. At the time, no victim was found.
It wasn’t until the daylight hours, at 8 a.m. that a resident found Farah with multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
On Saturday, Det. Jason Shankaran of Toronto police described the shooting as a “targeted” incident, saying police were withholding the victim’s name so that the family could notify additional relatives.
But for friends and community members who knew Farah as “always happy, always giving,” that term evokes a stigma that Ibrahim says is unwarranted and unfair.
“That’s what police said, but we haven’t gotten any information from them as to how they came to that conclusion,” said Ibrahim, telling CBC Toronto that he’s asked police to elaborate but hasn’t heard any more about just what being “targeted” means.
