Quote:... For example, I’m playing Oztag with friends as a sport, with a bunch of girls in a team.
But I read a couple of days ago in the media that FIFA had banned the Iranian women’s
soccer team because a girl had been strangled by her scarf. But then we had a sports boss
in Australia coming out and saying that this wouldn’t happen in Australia because that’s
discrimination. Look, you know this could happen to anyone and it’s not the fault of the
religion. So I feel pretty lucky living in Australia and the fact that people here are so open
minded and they accept different religions. There is racism here, and I have experienced
it, but no, I don’t think that it’s stopped me from doing anything.
For some, the level of racism appeared to be tolerable, to be managed by careful use of public
space, and staying close to friends. When asked to explain what sort of racism a young woman
had experienced, she recalls an incident where:
Quote:We were just walking in the street and someone looked at us as if they were going to
poison us with their faces. One time someone came up to us and told us to go back to our
country. I was like ‐ hold on –‘ I was born here, I’ve been here all my life’, then they react
with, ‘my God, they can speak English’ ‐ do you know what I mean? They don’t have that
expectation of you. So I gave them a funny look and they walked away.... Yes, they were
racists.
The quantitative research revealed that public schools are sites for higher levels of discrimination
than are Muslim schools. In consultations what was perceived as institutional prejudice was
regarded as contributing to the sense of systemic discrimination. One factor mentioned was the
local government denial of planning approval for Muslim schools and mosques.
Quote:We are here to stay and that’s the reality that some people don’t want to face. When we
want to build new schools in NSW, the people out there all get angry and react to Islam.
But they don’t do the same to Christian schools. This shows that the people are
discriminating against our religion, not because they know anything about it, but because
they are prejudiced against things that they don’t like.
Relations with police and the justice system produced the sharpest comments on perceived
racism. Community workers expressed a need for more work with police liaison officers and
cross‐cultural training. In the Sydney consultations, a local young woman told of her experience
of feeling targeted during a police outreach session in school. As a person of ‘Middle Eastern
background’, police profiling had left her feeling devastated stating:
Quote:‘I was an innocent Year 12 girl, and there I was being told that I was a criminal already.
Now that is always in the back of my head’.
Some of the refugee young people consulted felt distrustful of the police, due to bad experiences
with law enforcement authority in their home countries and their experiences in Australia. One
young stakeholder mentioned the resentment of some young African refugee men living in public
housing estates in Melbourne, towards the police. These young men felt harassed because of
their colour, put under continuing surveillance, and picked on in public places. A stakeholder
explains that their visibility in public places is attributable to a lack of social amenity for these
refugee men who have nowhere to go in the evening. Some of this dynamic has been broadcast
in a 2008 SBS TV documentary “Community Cop”, directed by Helen Gaynor, which follows a
group of young African Muslim men interacting with the police. In a related case Ahmed Dini, a
Somali man from that estate who was assaulted by police, received $70,000 compensation in
2010; he was one of 13 African Muslim complainants against Victorian Police in 2006 for police
brutality and harassment. These experiences soon enter the cultural consciousness of
communities that experience them, and continue to effect longer‐term attitudes and perceptions
of racism. Being picked up for ‘loitering’ outside your home, sitting on the footpath curb, playing
basketball at night and being strip searched for a minor issue, were reported. The young
stakeholder reports:
Quote:...Yeah, and it’s ridiculous. How can you loiter in front of your flat? Like, it’s my flat, I don’t
have a backyard (laughs). I can loiter in front of it if I want to – but no, it’s government
property and you’re loitering. You’re at the basketball court at twelve o’clock at night. It’s
the basketball court – ‘why are you there?’ You know, ‘what are you kids getting up to?
Are you dealing drugs?’ .... They don’t have a right to search your bag without a reason
and that’s the end. They don’t have a right to come and do that to you. Even though you
reacted in a way to make sure the situation did not blow out of proportion, but, we live in
Australia and we have rights in this country and therefore we should be able to access
[them].