By Hal G.P. Colebatch on 9.6.06 @ 12:07AM
Islamic immigrants down under are being instructed to conform to Australian values -- which are quite pleasant, incidentally.
I have written
previously on British moderate Muslims who have warned that
Britain faces further Muslim extremism unless its government meets
Muslim demands in domestic and foreign policy, including, according
to some, instituting Sharia Law.
In Australia, Prime Minister John Howard said on talk-back radio
recently that Muslim migrants needed to conform to Australian
values by learning English and treating women with respect.
Anyone who has not been following recent developments would
think such comments unexceptional. However, some Muslim community
leaders are reported to be "infuriated." The head of the
government's new Muslim advisory committee, Dr. Ameer Ali, warned
of trouble unless the Prime Minister backed down, claiming: "When
you antagonize the younger generation, younger group, they are
bound to react."
Howard replied: "There's a small section of the Islamic
population which is unwilling to integrate, and I have said,
generally, all migrants have to integrate, and that means speaking
English as quickly as possible, it means embracing Australian
values and it also means making sure that no matter what the
culture of the country from which they come might have been,
Australia requires women to be treated fairly and equally and in
the same fashion as men.
"And if any migrants that come into this country have a
different view, they better get rid of that view very quickly."
The Prime Minister was basically repeating views he had
expressed several times earlier, particularly after serious riots
and fighting between Australians and Lebanese Muslims in Cronulla
near Sydney a few months ago after a series of racially-motivated
rapes and other attacks on Australian women: "There is within some
sections of the Islamic community an attitude towards women which
is out of line with mainstream Australian society. It needs to be
dealt with by the broader community, including Islamic Australia.
There is really not much point in pretending it doesn't exist."
Former Federal Treasury Secretary and Senator John Stone has
written: "We have seen, among many other such developments, the
revelations over the gang-raping of 'white Aussie sluts' by young
Muslim men of Pakistani origin; the increasing Muslim lawlessness
in south-western Sydney; and the concerted raids on some eastern
suburbs by car-load convoys of young Muslim men 'responding,' so
they said, to the Cronulla riot of December 11, 2005. Incidentally,
while I do not condone that riot, it is worth remembering that it
was clearly provoked by the mounting anger over the behavior of
similar young Muslim men at Cronulla and other beaches for some
years previously."
The Islamic Council of NSW spokesman said of Howard's earlier
statement: "Within any pluralist society such obscene voices exist.
Within Australia we have seen Captain Francis De Groot and the New
Guard, then the League of Rights and the Australian Nationalists
Party and more recently the rise and fall of Pauline Hanson and her
One Nation party."
This is undoubtedly true. However, compared to the serious
concerns aroused by the Cronulla riots -- the first of their kind
in modern Australia -- and other matters, this is invoking straw
men. Australia has about 300,000 Muslims, or about 1.5% of the
population. Only 1% of these need be attracted to extremism to mean
big trouble. (According to the British Daily Mail of
August, 7, almost a quarter of Britain's Muslims -- 370,000 of 1.6
million -- believe the 7/7 London bombings were justified because
of British support for the War on Terror. Another poll indicated
more than 80% consider themselves Muslims rather than British.)
By comparison to the potentials here, the League of Rights and
the Australian Nationalist Party are unpleasant but politically
insignificant groupsicles. The League of Rights is unlikely to long
survive the recent demise of its founder, Eric Butler. It mainly
gives out cranky pamphlets about Fabianism. The One Nation Party,
whose concerns combined immigration restriction, high protectionism
and agrarian socialism, is also on its last legs. Its founder and
former leader, Pauline Hanson, was previously the proprietress of a
fish-and-chip shop who got into Federal Parliament by a fluke.
Despite press hysteria it was never a significant political force
and quickly imploded. Neither the League of Rights nor One Nation
have used or advocated violence (though One Nation was the victim
of repeated leftist disruptions of its meetings).
What of the New Guard and Captain De Groot? Here it is necessary
to know a little Australian history. The New Guard was a group
planning to fight any communist takeover of Australia in the 1920s
and 1930s. However, there was never any occasion for it to actually
do anything as Australia remained a peaceful parliamentary
democracy. Captain de Groot was its one member who achieved a
modest place in Australian popular history.
In the 1930s the Premier (that is, the political head) of the
State of New South Wales was Jack Lang, a populist of fiery
rhetoric who wished to repudiate the state's international
debt.
He was opposed by many people, including those who feared that
repudiation would make future borrowing impossible. Lang was
eventually dismissed by the state governor (the Queen's
representative in the Australian system), who called an election
after the federal government cut off funds to New South Wales and
the state could no longer function. In typical Australian fashion,
despite some feverish rhetoric, there was no bloodshed. Lang went
peacefully, and lived to a great age, somewhat mellowed and
regarded as an icon of Australian rambunctiousness -- a sincere if
mistaken patriot.
De Groot was an ex-soldier of Irish birth who, mounted on a
horse and wearing an old army uniform, mingled with the honor guard
at the opening of Sydney Harbour Bridge on March 19, 1932. Just
before Lang, as premier, was due to cut the ceremonial ribbon, De
Groot galloped up, and cutting the ribbon with his sword, said: "I
declare this bridge open in the name of the decent and respectable
people of New South Wales!" Lang was infuriated. Other people
laughed.
De Groot was a friend of Australia's first Jewish
governor-general, Sir Isaac Isaacs, for whom he made a ceremonial
chair. He said his action was a protest against Sir Isaac not being
invited to the ceremony. He was fined five pounds (about US$20) and
his sword, presented to him for gallantry in the Great War, was
confiscated but later returned.
To invoke De Groot -- remembered now like Lang with amused
affection in Australia -- to imply that Australia has had its own
tradition of political extremism only emphasizes how very little
extremism or communal strife Australia has actually experienced up
till now, despite the fact its entire non-Aboriginal population is
made up of settlers (including some convicts) from different
countries who have arrived since 1788. It also suggests a very
strange view of Australian history: why is such unreal hyperbole
being put by Muslim leaders as serious argument?
If Muslims in Australia wish to come up with a convincing
rejoinder to Mr. Howard's and John Stone's comments they are, in
the Australian phrase, going to have to lift their game.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Islam, Law, Pakistan, NATO, Socialism, Immigration