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Being a friend in a liminal zone can require us to fully immerse ourselves in the religious worldview of the other. Living and working as a resident assistant in a refugee resettlement home in Surrey, Canada has allowed me to explore both the academic and pastoral aspects of friendship, mutuality, and neighbouring in an intercultural and interreligious context. During the chaotic height of COVID, compounded by intercultural confusion, a comedy of errors results in a small fire, building evacuation, meetings in secret, panic about Djinn, and an invitation across religious divides (Jewish, Muslim, and syncretistic Christianity) to perform two separate exorcisms to cleanse the building of unwanted evil. My paper tells this hilarious story while drawing meaningful lessons about living in intercultural and interreligious contexts, and how we can find commonalities, humour, and meaning in traditions outside of our own to forge friendship and find healing in traumatized communities.