Boozy Aussies hooked on gambling: cleric09:15 AEST Fri Jan 23 2009
Australians are boozers hooked on prostitution and gambling, Melbourne Islamic cleric Abu Hamza says.
Mr Hamza made headlines on Thursday, and earned criticism from Islamic groups and Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, for a 2003 speech posted on the internet last year in which he said it was OK for Muslim men to hit their wives and that it was not possible for a man to rape his wife.
The Herald Sun newspaper on Friday reported the contents of another speech, also posted on the internet, in which Mr Hamza was critical of the Australian way of life.
"They think happiness can be achieved by being intoxicated, by going to the casino and blowing your money away, by going from one prostitute to the other," he said.
"They don't know what life is all about, that's why they are on the booze, why they are binge drinking . . . why unfortunately suicide has skyrocketed, murder, anxiety and depression."
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Islamic leaders have condemned Mr Hamza for his earlier remarks but the Coburg mosque cleric has told a confidant his message has been taken out of context and that he was referring to hitting wives in a metaphorical sense.
Mr Rudd told reporters Mr Hamza's comments had no place in modern Australia.
"Under no circumstances is sexual violence permissible or acceptable in Australia - under no circumstances," Mr Rudd said.
"Under no circumstances are other forms of violence, physical violence, acceptable towards women in Australia nor are they acceptable in my view to mainstream Muslim teachings.
"Australia will not tolerate these sort of remarks. They don't belong in modern Australia, and he should stand up, repudiate them and apologise."
The President of the Islamic Council of Victoria (ICV) Ramzi Elsayed said he had spoken with Mr Hamza about the lecture, titled The Keys to a Successful Marriage.
"He told me he was speaking in a metaphorical sense," Mr Elsayed told AAP.
"In regards to hitting your wife, his position is that it has always been metaphorical - it's not a whack, it's not a slap, it's a wake-up call."
He said Islam did not condone violence against women or making a wife have sex with her husband against her will.
"He believes he was taken out of context insofar as he was talking about people who censure their spouses - it was not so much a physical hit as a metaphorical one to say wake up, we're heading for a divorce kind-of-thing."
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/national/732111/boozy-aussies-hooked-on-gambling-cler...Good on you Ruddy for standing up and saying something