Five years ago I first saw Australians protesting against asylum seekers being imprisoned in their local community.
Frighteningly, they weren’t protesting about these innocent humans being locked into detention indefinitely; instead, these citizens were annoyed that the detainees were locked up so close to their comfortable, quiet neighbourhood. News footage at the time even showed a young child holding a sign that said, “sink the boats”.
Related: Two more asylum seekers have attempted suicide on Manus Island.
I decided that I didn’t want my own children growing up in a nation where it is socially acceptable to teach our children to fear and to exclude people who are different to them.
I wanted to do what I could to help people live as the tangible evidence of the Australia that I believe is possible – welcoming, compassionate, inclusive and fair. That’s why a few friends and I began Welcome to Australia.
Top Comments
The thing that drives me to distraction about the arguments about people wanting to protect the Australian way of life, is that our way of life is what it is because of successive waves of immigration which included a huge percentage of refugees.
Our coffee and cafe culture comes from the wave of Europeans fleeing post-war Europe. Vietnamese refugees gave us an amazing food culture, hard working people and a Saigon Hot Bake in every shopping centre. Even the fact that every town has a chinese take-away is down to the legacy of the gold rush. Australia is what it is because of immigration.
I completely agree with the author, we do need to stop the ocean routes but we need to do it through pro-active positive action to stop the routes. I think we should be helping Indonesia identify the leaders of the smuggling gangs, the actual owners of the boats are usually as much victims of their lies as the poor people on them.
It is my true wish that we can embrace this as an opportunity to grow our country but all I see is politicians making capital out of fear and it leaves me filled with despair for the good hearted people that I know we really are. Lets remember that unless you are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander your family were at some point immigrants. I hope they were welcomed better than we are doing now.
In an ideal world they would all be lovely law abiding people who will appreciate the freedom and opportunities Australia has to offer them.
Unfortunately we know that is not the complete picture. For every genuine refugee there are people who don't come with honest intentions and that is why we need to be very careful before we open the door to them. We are experiencing violence and crime in our suburbs that simply weren't an issue 20 years ago. There is a common denominator with this and we need to be careful. These people come from a culture where a peaceful way of life is foreign to them and women are treated as possessions. This is not the Australia I want my children growing up in.
If we don't learn by the mistakes of other countries who haven't exercised caution we only have ourselves to blame.
You make very valid points. I agree.
How do you know any of this? Have you actually checked crime statistics? Do you know who is behind most crime and what kinds of crimes are being committed??
Before you make generalised claims about crime and attributing the rise in crime to people coming in from elsewhere, might I suggest you familiarise yourself with the ABS (Australian Bureau of Statistics) crime reports and stats.
And in terms of women being treated as possessions and misogyny, this is not something that is a given or exclusive to other cultures ... in fact, look at the DV stats close to home.
This whole "our lifestyle" argument is bogus and ridiculous - for every argument against "these people", we only have to look in our own white neighbourhoods and find the same thing. Comments like yours are the perfect example of the fear and xenophobia this article is talking about.
Except instances of violent crime have decreased in the last decade, so nice try, but your opinion is based on ignorance. http://www.sbs.com.au/news/...
Chillax actually knows very little but reflects the sad, xenophobic, suburban views that are very common. Never let facts get in the way of good old bigotry.