They arrived by the thousands, pouring in from every corner of the Twin Cities to pay their respects to the five young women killed in a horrific crash on a busy Minneapolis thoroughfare days before.
The mourners packed a football field behind Dar Al-Farooq Islamic Center in Bloomington on Monday, where the shrouded bodies of the women — raised in that very mosque — lay resting in wooden trays prepared for burial.
"Ninety-nine percent of you guys didn't know them," Sheikh Saciid Shire told a sea of grieving Somali Americans and a dozen public officials before traditional Janazah funeral prayers. "But these young sisters … were righteous to their parents. May Allah have mercy on them."
Under the beating afternoon sun, male relatives gathered at the front of the field silently wiped away tears as they recited the blessing over the young women — each beloved scholars and community leaders. Their lives were extinguished in an instant when a speeding motorist ran a red light in south Minneapolis last weekend, broadsiding their vehicle as they returned home from the mall.
Those killed were: Sabiriin Ali, 17, of Bloomington, a recent Edina High School graduate who planned to study medicine at the University of Minnesota; Sahra Gesaade, 20, of Brooklyn Center, a third-year student at the U's Rochester campus; Salma Abdikadir, 20, of St. Louis Park, a second-year student at Normandale Community College; Sagal Hersi, 19, of Minneapolis, a student at Minneapolis Community and Technical College; and Siham Adam, 19, of Minneapolis, a student at the U.
All attended services, volunteered and taught at the mosque for many years. Salma educated elementary-age students on the Qur'an and Islamic studies, while Sabiriin was known as a diligent caretaker of the building.
"These girls were not just ordinary girls," said Abdulahi Farah, a board member of the Bloomington mosque. "They practically grew up at Dar Al-Farooq and were loved by the community. So this loss is touching all of us. But today is just a testament of who they were and what impact they had on the community."
News of their sudden deaths came as a shock to the broader Somali diaspora in Minnesota, and many are still struggling to make sense of the tragedy. The crash sparked an outpouring of support — an online fundraiser for the young women's families had raised more than $377,000 as of Monday evening — and elicited condolences from around the world.