BY JAMILA RIZVI
Scared is the wrong word.
I don’t feel scared, more like anxious. It’s that sensation of having eaten a chip and not quite having chewed enough, so it’s grated my throat on the way down.
I go about my day. I forget that uncomfortable feeling for a few minutes or even hours at a time. But then I walk past a television screen, glance at my Facebook feed or hear the murmur of “is this really happening here?” conversations and suddenly – the anxiety returns.
This morning we woke to the news that police raids across Sydney and Brisbane had foiled terrorist plots, one which included executing a random member of the Australian public. A terror cell allegedly planned to abduct an innocent person in Sydney’s Martin Place, drape them in an Islamic State flag and behead them on camera.
Sydney’s Martin Place. Where the alleged beheading was going to take place (via Sydney Council)
Recent widely publicised cases involving the beheading of journalists and aid workers abroad, show that Islamic State appears to favour this highly theatrical brutality. They favour it because this barbaric style of murder captures the attention of those living in democratised nations; in a way that the use of modern weapons does not.
Top Comments
you know, technically religion and culture is something people choose to be a part of...I gave up mine years ago and walked away just because it made no rational sense and I could see it spreading harm around. No one forces anybody to be a muslim, especially in Australia today.
Australia wants to be part of the world, but it doesn't want to be touched or involved too much with its more difficult subjects. We want to live in a beautiful, low density country but we aren't too happy about sharing it. Meanwhile, crowded, impoverished countries welcome refugee's more readily and in more numbers than we do. Yes, it's Australia, but Australia is part of the world. What happens to one person can happen to anyone. We don't live in a fishbowl, we live in a world which is in constant conflict, and sometimes that conflict will take place here - and what right do we have to demand it not happen to us, that it's better to happen to someone else?
Australia needs to grow up. We're like teenagers using racism as an excuse to throw a violent tantrum every time some horrible happens. We let men get away with beating the absolute crap out of strangers and attacking women by writing it off as racial tension or race riots, when it fact its just people being violent for absolutely no reason, other than they want to belt someone, or abuse someone. Adults don't act like that. Adults explore their motives, think about the consequences of their actions and ask themselves what they can do to keep the peace long-term, because they care about something other than their own selfish needs and immediate wants.
I say this with the greatest respect to you Jamila. I have no idea what it's like to be a Muslim in Australia at the moment, and what happened to you earlier this week is revolting.