With white flags, Quebec daycares show solidarity with Laval community after fatal crash
CBC
When Georgia Haloulos got to work at the Hellenique Ta Pedakia daycare in Montreal Thursday, she knew she had to put on a smile despite the heaviness of knowing two children had died in a Laval daycare the previous day when the building was rammed by a bus.
"Whether it's in one daycare or another, we're all teachers, we all feel the same. Kids are our priority and we love what we do," she said.
"We want to make sure we send them back home happy, that they've had a great day, they've been educated, they had fun, they played with their friends. You make sure they go home safe. No one wants to call a parent or let a parent hear that. The thought gives us chills."
Haloulos is still trying to process what happened while knowing she can't bring those difficult emotions to work, as the children "don't need the stress," she said. For Haloulos, being around children and playing helps her take her mind off the tragic news.
"When we leave the premises, it's a different story."
Her colleague, Jihad Rhoualemi, an educator for the three- to four-year-old age group, said she couldn't sleep Wednesday night. She said she cried non-stop, thinking about the two children who were killed — and how their parents must be feeling.
"Say we're outside, we're taking a walk, an accident can happen like a kid can fall or someone tries to kidnap, we're there and we're vigilant. That's our job," she said through tears.
"But a bus that drives right through a wall and kills babies, kills children trapped under the bus…"
Rhoualemi says she wants parents and educators in Laval to know she and her colleagues stand in solidarity with them. But she says she and her colleagues just have to keep going, because incidents like these are rare, unpredictable and can't be prevented.
"We are trying to breathe, tell ourselves it already happened, we're trying to be calm and not showing anything to our kids today," she said.
"I put on some music this morning, they danced and sang like usual, we didn't change anything. We're doing our best for the kids' safety, that's all we can do."
The Réseau des services à la petite enfance de l'Est du Québec urged people to hang white flags in front of daycares across the province. At least 10 participated.
Samir Alahmad, president of the Private Daycare Association of Quebec, said he has never faced anything like Wednesday's attack and hopes he never has to again.
"What we got yesterday is news no one wants to get, we are devastated. It's tragic when something happens to kids. What happened yesterday, there are no words to describe it," he said.