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"Thank you for asking." The unexpected question from a student that touched Jacinda Ardern.

Mamamia has chosen not to show the face of the man in custody for the Christchurch terror attack, or to include or link to any distressing material about his acts. Instead, we are dedicated to remembering the names, faces and stories of the victims.

When New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern asked students at Cashmere High School if they had any questions for her, a teen near the front row put their hand up.

“How are you?” they asked their country’s leader.

It was an extremely thoughtful question.

May more world leaders embrace compassion in their politics like Jacinda Ardern has. Post continues below.

Christchurch’s Cashmere High School has been devastated by Friday’s terror attack on two mosques.

Two students – 14-year-old Sayyad Milne, who had “kind eyes, a big heart and a cheeky smile” and 16-year-old Hamza Mustafa, who had fled the Syrian civil war with his family, loved horses and dreamed of being a vet – died during the attack.

A third student, Hamza's younger brother Zaid, is still in hospital with gunshot wounds. Their father was killed, as was the father of another Cashmere student and a past student.

The school is shaken up and in mourning.

Appearing in front of students in their school hall, she called on them to honour their fallen friends and family.

"Keep telling their stories. It's them who we need to honour," she said.

"Don't dwell on his name. Don't dwell on who he is. Dwell on your students and friends, on the Muslim community."

Ardern also spoke about plans to change New Zealand's gun laws and requested students help her make the country a place where "we don't let racism exist".

Mamamia’s daily news podcast The Quicky shares the tales of bravery and hope after the Christchurch attacks. Post continues below audio.

She reminded them that their grief was important and offered channels in which they could get help if they needed it.

As she has been since Friday's attack, she was strong and empathetic.

But the kindness of one student to check in on her well-being, to ask how she was coping, clearly touched her.

"How am I?" Jacinda repeated.

"Thank you for asking," she said. "I am very sad."

It was a simple question and a simple answer, but it said so much about the leader and her country.

For more on this topic:

"In my homeland's darkest days, I've never been prouder to be a New Zealander."

'We will give him nothing, not even his name.' Jacinda Ardern's powerful speech to parliament.

These are the names and faces of all the known victims of the Christchurch terrorist attack.

Why the world can’t look away from Jacinda Ardern in the wake of the Christchurch attack.

“These won’t be my best words…” Waleed Aly’s moving monologue on Christchurch.

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