Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen
Malik, who opened fire on a San Bernardino holiday party earlier this
month, were buried Tuesday in
a quiet, graveside funeral.
a quiet, graveside funeral.
Many of those who attended mosque with the couple refused to attend, two mosque members said.
U.S.-born
Farook, 28, and his Pakistani-born wife Malik, 29, killed 14 people and
injured 21, in what U.S. officials have called a terrorist attack. They
died later that day in a gun battle with police.
The
funeral followed traditional Islamic rituals, said an attendee. At a
Muslim cemetery hours away from San Bernardino, the bodies were cleansed
according to Islamic rules, wrapped in white cloth and buried.
The
funeral attendee and another person familiar with the situation, both
of whom asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation, said it took
a week to find a graveyard willing to accept the bodies.
They said the husband and wife
were ultimately buried in a cemetery far from San Bernardino, after a
closer facility refused to take the bodies because of fears the graves
would be desecrated. Neither person would identify the cemetery where
the couple was buried.
Muslims
are usually buried within 24 hours of dying, but family members and
community members had to wait for the bodies to be released by law
enforcement officials and then for permission from a cemetery.
Neither
source would say which cemetery refused to bury the couple, but a woman
at the Islamic Cemetery & Masjid in Adelanto, Calif. – less than an
hour from San Bernardino – confirmed the cemetery had refused to bury
the bodies, in part out of a fear of backlash, but also for “other
reasons". She declined to give her name.
The
family of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, one of the two men accused of carrying out
the Boston Marathon bombing attack in 2013, faced similar difficulty
finding a place to bury his body after the attack. Graveyards in
Massachusetts refused to accept the body, and the family ultimately
buried him in an unmarked grave in Virginia.
About
10 people went to the funeral, the attendee said, including members of
Farook's family and people who used to pray with him at mosques in San
Bernardino County.
But most Muslims in the
community refused to participate in the burial or perform the funeral
prayer, called Salat Al-Janazah, according to the source who did not
attend the funeral.
"I
don't forgive him myself," said the mosque-goer who did not attend the
funeral. Still, he added, "I pray mercy for him, and we Muslims know God
is merciful. But he's also just."
Farook
and Malik left behind a 6-month-old daughter, who has been in state
custody since the Dec. 2 massacre. Farook's sister and brother-in-law,
Saira and Farhan Khan, have said they hope to adopt their niece.
An attorney for family members did not immediately return a call seeking comment for this story.
(This version of the story corrects first paragraph to remove reference to FBI guarding funeral)
(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb, additional reporting by Idrees Ali in San Bernardino,; Editing by Sue Horton and Ken Wills)
Source: Reuters
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