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Islam in Australia

Islam is the second largest religion in Australia. According to the 2021 Census in Australia, the combined number of people who self-identified as Muslims in Australia, from all forms of Islam, constituted 813,392 people, or 3.2% of the total Australian population.[1][2] That total Muslim population makes Islam, in all its denominations and sects, the second largest religious grouping in Australia, after all denominations of Christianity (43.9%,[3] also including non-practicing cultural Christians).

The Adelaide Mosque in Adelaide, South Australia is amongst the oldest mosques in Australia having been built in 1888-89.

Demographers attribute Muslim community growth trends during the most recent census period to relatively high birth rates, and recent immigration patterns.[4][5] Adherents of Islam represent the majority of the population in Cocos (Keeling) Islands, an external territory of Australia.[6]

The vast majority of Muslims in Australia are Sunni, with significant minorities belonging to the Shia denomination. The followers of each of these are further split along different Madhhab (schools of thought within Islamic jurisprudence for the interpretation and practice of Islamic law) and Sub-Sect. There are also practitioners of other smaller denominations of Islam such as Ibadi Muslim Australians of Omani descent, and approximately 20,000 Druze Australians whose religion emerged as an offshoot of Islam which arrived in Australia with the immigration of Druze mainly from Lebanon and Syria. There are also Sufi (Islamic mysticism) minorities among Muslim practitioners in Australia.[7]

While the overall Australian Muslim community is defined largely by a common religious identity, Australia's Muslims are not a monolithic community. The Australian Muslim community has traditional sectarian divisions and is also extremely diverse racially, ethnically, culturally and linguistically.[8] Different Muslim groups within the Australian Muslim community thus also espouse parallel non-religious ethnic identities with related non-Muslim counterparts, either within Australia or abroad.[9]

History edit

Prior to 1860 edit

Islam has been in Australia since the 1700s when Makassar traders were long-term visitors to Arnhem land (now Northern Territory).[10] A dance among the Warramiri people refers to a dreamtime creational being is given the name, Walitha Walitha, which is an adaptation of the Arabic phrase Allah ta'ala (God, the exalted).[11] The 'Dreaming' creation figure, Walitha' walitha, is also known as Allah.[11] In the Warramiri tradition, Walitha' walitha descends from heaven to re-establish order from infighting and violence between different groups in Arnhem land. Indigenous Australians share this ceremony, known as the Wurramu, with the people of Macassar Indonesia, but the Aboriginal version is a mortuary ritual. Aboriginal elders explain on an 'outside' level' the dance performance is about the new world introduced to Aborigines in pre-colonial times as a result of this first contact experience, but on an 'inside' level, they focus on the Aboriginal deaths that occurred as a consequence of contact with these fishing peoples from the north of Australia. The 'inside' meaning of the ritual relates to the passage of the soul of the deceased to a heavenly paradise above, the abode of Allah.[10]

Indonesian Muslims trepangers from the southwest corner of Sulawesi visited the coast of northern Australia, "from at least the eighteenth century"[12] to collect and process trepang, a marine invertebrate prized for its culinary and medicinal values in Chinese markets. Remnants of their influence can be seen in the culture of some of the northern Aboriginal peoples. Regina Ganter, an associate professor at Griffith University, says, "Staying on the safe grounds of historical method ... the beginning of the trepang industry in Australia [can be dated] to between the 1720s and 1750s, although this does not preclude earlier, less organised contact." Ganter also writes "the cultural imprint on the Yolngu people of this contact is everywhere: in their language, in their art, in their stories, in their cuisine."[13] According to anthropologist John Bradley from Monash University, the contact between the two groups was a success: "They traded together. It was fair - there was no racial judgement, no race policy." Even into the early 21st century, the shared history between the two peoples is still celebrated by Aboriginal communities in Northern Australia as a period of mutual trust and respect.[14]

Others who have studied this period have come to a different conclusion regarding the relationship between the Aboriginal people and the visiting trepangers. Anthropologist Ian McIntosh[15] has said that the initial effects of the Macassan fishermen were "terrible", which resulted in "turmoil"[16]: 65–67  with the extent of Islamic influence being "indeterminate".[16]: 76  In another paper McIntosh concludes, "strife, poverty and domination . . is a previously unrecorded legacy of contact between Aborigines and Indonesians."[17]: 138  A report prepared by the History Department of the Australian National University says that the Macassans appear to have been welcomed initially, however relations deteriorated when, "aborigines began to feel they were being exploited . . leading to violence on both sides".[18]: 81–82 

A number of "Mohammedans" were listed in the musters of 1802, 1811, 1822, and the 1828 census, and a small number of Muslims arrived during the convict period. Beyond this, Muslims generally are not thought to have settled in large numbers in other regions of Australia until 1860.[19]: 10 

Muslims were among the earliest settlers of Norfolk Island while the island was used as a British penal colony in the early 19th century. They arrived from 1796, having been employed on British ships. They left following the closure of the penal colony and moved to Tasmania. The community left no remnants; only seven permanent residents of the island identified themselves as "non-Christian" in a 2006 census.[20][21][22]

1860 onward: cameleers and pearlers edit

 
19th-century mosque in cemetery, Bourke, New South Wales

Among the early Muslims were the "Afghan" camel drivers who migrated to and settled in Australia during the mid to late 19th century. Between 1860 and the 1890s a number of Central Asians came to Australia to work as camel drivers. Camels were first imported into Australia in 1840, initially for exploring the arid interior (see Australian camel), and later for the camel trains that were uniquely suited to the demands of Australia's vast deserts. The first camel drivers arrived in Melbourne, Victoria, in June 1860, when eight Muslims and Hindus arrived with the camels for the Burke and Wills expedition. The next arrival of camel drivers was in 1866 when 31 men from Rajasthan and Baluchistan arrived in South Australia with camels for Thomas Elder. Although they came from several countries, they were usually known in Australia as 'Afghans' and they brought with them the first formal establishment of Islam in Australia.[23]

 
The grave of an Afghan cameleer

Cameleers settled in the areas near Alice Springs and other areas of the Northern Territory and inter-married with the Indigenous population. The Adelaide, South Australia to Darwin, Northern Territory, railway is named The Ghan (short for The Afghan) in their memory.[24]

The first mosque in Australia was built in 1861 at Marree, South Australia.[25] The Great Mosque of Adelaide was built in 1888 by the descendants of the Afghan cameleers. The Broken Hill Mosque at North camel camp was built by the cameleers between 1887 and 1891.[26]

During the 1870s, Muslim Malay divers were recruited through an agreement with the Dutch to work on Western Australian and Northern Territory pearling grounds. By 1875, there were 1800 Malay divers working in Western Australia. Most returned to their home countries.[citation needed]

One of the earliest recorded Islamic festivals celebrated in Australia occurred on 23 July 1884 when 70 Muslims assembled for Eid prayers at Albert Park, Melbourne. The Auckland Star noted the ceremony's calm demeanor, stating: "During the whole service the worshippers wore a remarkably reverential aspect."[27]

20th century edit

 
Replica of ice cream van owned by one of the killers in the 1915 "Battle of Broken Hill".

Most of the cameleers returned to their countries after their work had dried up, but a few had brought wives and settled in Australia with their families, and others settled either on their own (some living at the Adelaide Mosque), or married Aboriginal or European women. Halimah Schwerdt, secretary to Mahomet Allum, a former cameleer who established himself as herbalist, healer and philanthropist in Adelaide, became first European woman in Australia to publicly embrace Islam. She was engaged to Allum in 1935-37, but there is no record of a wedding.[28] He married Jean Emsley in 1940, who converted to Islam later. Allam also published pamphlets and articles about Islam.[29]

From 1901, under the provisions of the White Australia policy, immigration to Australia was restricted to persons of white European descent (including white Europeans of the Muslim faith). Meanwhile, persons not of white European heritage (including most Muslims) were denied entry to Australia during this period, and those already settled were not granted Australian citizenship.[30]

Notable events involving Australian Muslims during this early period include what has been described either as an act of war by the Ottoman Empire, or the earliest terrorist attack planned against Australian civilians.[31] The attack was carried out at Broken Hill, New South Wales, in 1915, in what was described as the Battle of Broken Hill. Two Afghans who pledged allegiance to the Ottoman Empire shot and killed four Australians and wounded seven others before being killed by the police.[32]

 
Melbourne's first mosque, built by the Albanian community

In the 1920s and 1930s Albanian Muslims, whose European heritage made them compatible with the White Australia Policy, immigrated to the country.[33][34][35] The Albanian arrival revived the Australian Muslim community whose ageing demographics were until that time in decline[36] and Albanians became some of the earliest post-colonial Muslim groups to establish themselves in Australia.[37] Some of the earliest communities with a sizable Albanian Muslim population were Mareeba, Queensland and Shepparton in Victoria.[38][39][40]

Post-war migration edit

The perceived need for population growth and economic development in Australia led to the broadening of Australia's immigration policy in the post-World War II period. This allowed for the acceptance of a number of displaced white European Muslims who began to arrive from other parts of Europe, mainly from the Balkans, especially from Bosnia and Herzegovina. As with the Albanian Muslim immigrants before them, the European heritage of these displaced Muslims also made them compatible with the White Australia Policy.[41]

Albanians partook in the revival of Islamic life within Australia, in particular toward creating networks and institutions for the community.[42] Albanian Muslims built the first mosque in Shepparton, Victoria (1960),[34][43] first mosque in Melbourne (1969)[38] and another in 1985,[44][45] and a mosque in Mareeba, Far North Queensland (1970).[38]

With the increase in immigration of Muslims after the war from countries such as Bosnia, Albania and Kosovo, the Islam in Australia developed its characteristic plurality. The move proved enriching for Muslim migrants, who "met Muslim fellows from many different ethnic, racial, cultural, sectarian and linguistic backgrounds" and "found Islam more pluralistic and more sophisticated" than their countries of origin.[46]

Later, between 1967 and 1971, during the final years of the step-by-step dismantling of the White Australia policy, approximately 10,000 Turkish citizens settled in Australia under an agreement between Australia and Turkey. From the 1970s onwards, there was a significant shift in the government's attitude towards immigration, and with the White Australia policy now totally dismantled from 1973 onwards, instead of trying to make newer foreign nationals assimilate and forgo their heritage, the government became more accommodating and tolerant of differences by adopting a policy of multiculturalism.[citation needed]

 
The Chullora Greenacre Mosque

Larger-scale Muslim migration of non-White non-European Muslims began in 1975 with the migration of Lebanese Muslims, which rapidly increased during the Lebanese Civil War from 22,311 or 0.17% of the Australian population in 1971, to 45,200 or 0.33% in 1976.[citation needed] Lebanese Muslims are still the largest and highest-profile Muslim group in Australia, although Lebanese Christians form a majority of Lebanese Australians, outnumbering their Muslim counterparts at a 6-to-4 ratio.[citation needed]

1990s edit

Trade and educational links have been developed between Australia and several Muslim countries. Muslim students from countries such as Malaysia, Indonesia, India, Bangladesh and Pakistan, are among the thousands of international students studying in Australian universities.[quantify][citation needed]

A number of Australian Arabs experienced anti-Arab backlash during the First Gulf War (1990–91). Newspapers received numerous letters calling for Arab Australians to "prove their loyalty" or "go home", and some Arab Australian Muslim women wearing hijab head coverings were reportedly harassed in public. The Australian government's Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission included accounts of racial harassment experienced by some Australian Arabs in their 1991 report on racism in Australia.[19]: 11–13 

21st century edit

 
Kuraby Mosque Brisbane attracts large number of worshippers in Friday prayers.

By the beginning of the 21st-century, Muslims from more than sixty countries had settled in Australia. While a very large number of them come from Bosnia, Turkey, and Lebanon, there are Muslims from Indonesia, Malaysia, Iran, Fiji, Albania, Sudan, Somalia, Egypt, the Palestinian territories, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh, among others.[citation needed] At the time of the 2011 census, 476,000 Australians (representing 2.2 percent of the population) reported Islam as their religion.[47]

On a few occasions in the 2000s and 2010s, tensions have flared between Australian Muslims and the general population. The Sydney gang rapes formed a much-reported set of incidents in 2000; a group of Lebanese men sexually assaulted non-Muslim women. In 2005, tensions between Muslims and non-Muslims in the Cronulla area of Sydney led to violent rioting; the incident resulted in mass arrests and criminal prosecution. In 2012, Muslims protesting in central Sydney against Innocence of Muslims, an anti-Islam film trailer, resulted in rioting.[48] There was an increase in anti-Muslim sentiment in the aftermath of the Sydney hostage crisis on 15–16 December 2014, including a threat made against a mosque in Sydney.[49] However, the Muslim community also received support from the Australian public through a social media campaign.[50][51]

 
Islamic Museum of Australia in Melbourne

The founding president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils has said that with moderate Muslims being sidelined by those promoting more fundamentalist views, there is a need to be more careful in regard to potential Australian immigrants. Keysar Trad has said moderate Muslims need to take back control.[52]

An article in The Australian in May 2015 opined, "Most Muslims want the peace and prosperity that comes from an Islam that coexists with modernity; it is a fanatical fringe that seeks to impose a fabricated medieval Islam". It describes Dr Jamal Rifi as a brave insider who is working to assist "the cause of good Muslims who are struggling for the soul of Islam".[53]

Islamic denominations in Australia edit

Most Australian Muslims are Sunni, with Shia, Sufi and Ahmadiyya as minorities.[54]

Sunni edit

In Sydney, adherents of the Sunni denomination of Islam are concentrated in the suburb of Lakemba and surrounding areas such as Punchbowl, Wiley Park, Bankstown and Auburn.

In Australia there are also groups associated with the "hardline" Salafi branch of Sunni Islam, including the Islamic Information and Services Network of Australasia[55] and Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamaah Association (Australia) (ASWJA).[56] While their numbers are small,[57] the ASWJA is said to "punch above its weight".[8]

There are communities of NSW Muslims who adhere to Tablighi Jamaat form of Islam and worship at the Granville, Al Noor Masjid, which is led by Sheik Omar El-Banna.[58][59] Similarly many Bangladeshi Tablighi Jamaat, Muslims[60] worship at mosques in Seaton, NSW[61] and in Huntingdale Victoria.[62]

Dawateislami, which is a "non-political Islamic organisation based in Pakistan", has adherents in Australia.[63]

In 2015, Wikileaks cables released information that Saudi Arabia closely monitors the situation of Islam and Arab community in Australia, whilst at the same time spending considerately to promote its fundamentalist version of Sunni Islam within the country.[64]

Shia edit

 
Shi'a commemorating Ashura outside the Opera House, Sydney.

The Shi'a denomination of Islam is centred in the St George, Campbelltown, Fairfield, Auburn and Liverpool regions of Sydney, with the al-Zahra Mosque, built in Arncliffe in 1983,[65] and the Al-Rasool Al-A'dham Mosque serves the region in Bankstown. In 2008, the mainstream Shia community numbered 30,000 followers nationally.[66]

In October 2004 Sheikh Mansour Leghaei established the Imam Hasan Centre[67] in Annangrove, NSW.

In November 2014, up to 3,000 Shi'a Muslims marched in Sydney on the annual Ashura Procession to mark the death of the prophet's grandson.[68][69] In November 2015 there was Ashura march in Sydney[citation needed] and a Victorian school observed Muharram.[70]

Others edit

There are also others from smaller non-mainstream sects of Islam, including approximately 20,000 Alawites from Turkish, Syrian and Lebanese backgrounds.[71] They have at least one school called Al Sadiq College, with campuses in the Sydney suburbs of Yagoona and Greenacre.[72] There is also a population of the related, though distinct, Alevis.[73]

There is also an Ismaili population of unspecified size.[74][75] While Dawoodi Bohra, a small Ismaili Shia sect[76] has its Sydney Jamaat located in Auburn NSW.[77]

Additionally, the Druze, who practice Druzism, a religion that began as an offshoot of 11th-century Ismaili Islam,[78] are reported to have around 20,000 followers living in Australia.[79]

Sufi edit

The study of the history of Sufism in Australia is a fledgling discipline. Initial examination indicates that the Sufis have played an important part in Muslim engagement with Australia and its peoples.[80] There are many reported instances of Sufism amongst the cameleers, though the best available evidence of this to date exists within a hand written manuscript at the historic Broken Hill mosque, providing at least one instance of Qadiri Sufis amongst the cameleers.[26][81]

Baron Friedrich von Frankenberg, who was inspired by the man who first brought to the West, Inayat Khan, moved to Australia from Germany with his family in 1927. The baron and his Australian wife were well-liked, and students would study Sufism under von Frankenberg at their home in Camden, New South Wales. In 1939 he organised the visit of a renowned Sufi leader, or Murshida, and devotee of Khan, known as Murshida Rabia Martin. Born Ada Ginsberg, the daughter of Russian Jewish immigrants to the US, Martin's visit was of great significance because of her link to Khan. After the baron's death in 1950, the poet and artist Francis Brabazon, student of Meher Baba, another early spiritual teacher took up a leadership role.[46] However, there is some contention regarding the extent to which this group adhered to Islamic practice, limiting the extent to which this group can be considered a representation of Islam in Australia.

Currently there are communities representing most of the major Sufi Orders within Australia, including, but not limited to the Mevlevi, Rifaii, Naqshbandiyya,[82] and Burhaniyya. Amongst these Sufi communities, it is estimated there are at least 5,000 adherents.[83]

Sectarian tensions edit

Conflict between religious groups in the Middle East are reflecting as tensions within the Australian community[84][85][86][87] and in the schools.[88]

Religious life edit

The Australian Muslim community has built a number of mosques and Islamic schools, and a number of imams and clerics act as the community's spiritual and religious leaders. In 1988, the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils (AFIC) appointed Sheikh Taj El-Din Hilaly as the first Grand Mufti of Australia and New Zealand.[citation needed] In 2007, Hilaly was succeeded by Fehmi Naji in June 2007[89] who was succeeded by the current Grand Mufti, Ibrahim Abu Mohamed in September 2011.[90]

 
Sunshine Mosque located in Melbourne serves the Turkish Cypriot community.

Fatwas, edicts based on Islamic jurisprudence which aim to provide "guidance to Muslim Australians in the personal, individual and private spheres of life",[91] are issued by various Australian Islamic authorities.[92][93]

Organisations edit

A number of organisations and associations are run by the Australian Islamic community including mosques, private schools and charities and other community groups and associations. Broad community associations which represent large segments of the Australian Muslim public are usually termed "Islamic councils". Some organisations are focused on providing assistance and support for specific sectors within the community, such as women.

Two organisations with strong political emphasis are Hizb ut-Tahrir[94] which describes itself as a, "political party whose ideology is Islam"[95][96] and Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamaah Association (ASWJA).[97][98]

A number of financial institutions have developed Sharia-compliant finance products,[99] with university courses leading to Islamic financial qualifications also being established.[100] Other Australian Islamic organisations have been set up to manage sharia-compliant investments, superannuation,[101][102] Islamic wills[103] and zakat management.[104][105]

Halal certification edit

There are close to two dozen Halal certification authorities in Australia. Halal meat and meat product exports to the Middle East and Southeast Asia have greatly increased from the 1970s onwards; this expansion was due in part to efforts of the AFIC.[19]: 151  Halal certification has been criticised by anti-Halal campaigners who argue that the practice funds the growth of Islam, results in added costs, a requirement to officially certify intrinsically-halal foods and with consumers required to subsidise a particular religious belief.[106]

An inquiry by an Australian Senate committee, which concluded in December 2015, found the current system is "lacklustre" and made recommendations for improvement.[107] It found there was no evidence to support claims that the profits of halal certification are used to fund terrorism.[108][109] The report recognised that halal certification has economic benefits for Australia because of increased export opportunities.[107] It recommended that the federal government increase its oversight of halal certifiers to address fraudulent conduct, with halal products to be clearly labelled and for meat products sourced from animals subject to religious slaughter, to be specifically labelled.[110] It said that it had heard, "credible reports suggesting that the lack of regulation has been unscrupulously exploited". In tabling the report, committee chairman Sam Dastyari said, "Some certifiers are nothing more than scammers."[111] The committee recommended a single halal certification authority.[111] The committee in recommending clearer labelling, specifically referred to the need for meat processors to label products sourced from animals subject to religious slaughter.[112]

Demography edit

Historical population edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1981 76,792—    
1991 147,487+92.1%
2001 281,578+90.9%
2011 476,291+69.2%
2016 604,235+26.9%
2021 813,392+34.6%

During the 1980s the Australian Muslim population increased from 76,792 or 0.53% of the Australian population in 1981, to 109,523 or 0.70% in 1986.[citation needed] In the 2011 Census, the Muslim population was 479,300 or 2.25%, an increase of 438% on the 1981 number.

The general increase of the Muslim population in this decade was from 147,487 or 0.88% of the Australian population in 1991, to 200,885 or 1.12% in 1996.[citation needed]

In 2005 the overall Muslim population in Australia had grown from 281,600 or 1.50% of the general Australian population in 2001, to 340,400 or 1.71% in 2006. The growth of Muslim population at this time was recorded as 3.88% compared to 1.13% for the general Australian population.[citation needed]. From 2011-2016, Muslim population grew by 27% from 476,291 to 604,200 with majority residing in New South Wales.

The following is a breakdown of the country of birth of Muslims in Australia from 2001:[113]

There were 281,578 Muslims recorded in this survey; in the 2006 census the population had grown to 340,392.[114] 48% of Australian-born Muslims claimed Lebanese or Turkish ancestry.[113]

The distribution by state of the nation's Islamic followers has New South Wales with 50% of the total number of Muslims, followed by Victoria (33%), Western Australia (7%), Queensland (5%), South Australia (3%), ACT (1%) and both Northern Territory and Tasmania sharing 0.3%.[citation needed]

The majority of people who reported Islam as their religion in the 2006 Census were born overseas: 58% (198,400).[114] Of all persons affiliating with Islam in 2006 almost 9% were born in Lebanon and 7% were born in Turkey.[115]

Areas edit

 
At the 2011 census, people who were affiliated with Islam as a percentage of the total population in Australia divided geographically by statistical local area
 
At the 2011 census, people who were affiliated with Islam as a percentage of the total population in Sydney divided geographically by postal area

According to the 2016 census, the Muslim population numbered 604,235 individuals, of whom 42% live in Greater Sydney, 31% in Greater Melbourne, and 8% in Greater Perth. The states and territories with the highest proportion of Muslims are New South Wales (3.58%) and Victoria (3.32%), whereas those with the lowest are Queensland (0.95%) and Tasmania (0.49%).[116]

4.2% of people in Greater Melbourne are Muslim.[117] Many Muslims living there are Bosnian and Turkish. Melbourne's Australian Muslims live primarily in the northern suburbs surrounding Broadmeadows, (mostly Turkish), Coburg, Brunswick, Epping (mostly Lebanese) and Truganina, Tarneit (mostly Indian). They also form communities in outer south-eastern suburbs such as Dandenong and Hallam (mostly Afghan and Pakistani).

Very few Muslims live in rural areas with the exceptions of the sizeable Albanian and Turkish communities in Shepparton, which has Victoria's oldest mosque, and Malays in Katanning, Western Australia. A community of Iraqis have settled in Cobram on the Murray River in Victoria.[118] An Albanian Muslim community resides in Mareeba who established Queensland's second oldest mosque.

Perth also has a Muslim community focussed in and around the suburb of Thornlie, where there is a mosque. Perth's Australian Islamic School has around 2,000 students on three campuses.

Mirrabooka and Beechboro contain predominantly Bosnian communities. The oldest mosque in Perth is the Perth Mosque on William Street in Northbridge. It has undergone many renovations although the original section still remains. Other mosques in Perth are located in Rivervale, Mirrabooka, Beechboro and Hepburn.

There are also communities of Muslims from Turkey, the Indian subcontinent (Pakistan, India and Bangladesh) and South-East Asia, in Sydney and Melbourne, the Turkish communities around Auburn, New South Wales and Meadow Heights and Roxburgh Park and the South Asian communities around Parramatta. Indonesian Muslims, are more widely distributed in Darwin.

Communities edit

Muslim population by country of origin

  Australia (36%)
  Lebanon (10%)
  Turkey (8%)
  Bosnia-Herzegovina (3.6%)
  Afghanistan (3.5%)
  Pakistan (3.2%)
  Indonesia (2.9%)
  Iraq (2.8%)
  Bangladesh (2.7%)
  Iran (2.3%)
  Fiji (2%)
  Other (23%)

It is estimated that Australian Muslims come from 63 different backgrounds, with "loose associations" between them.[58]

Aboriginal Muslims edit

According to Australia's 2011 census, 1,140 people identify as Aboriginal Muslims, almost double the number of Aboriginal Muslims recorded in the 2001 census.[119] Many are converts and some are descendants of Afghan cameleers or, as in the Arnhem Land people, have Macassan ancestry as a result of the historical Makassan contact with Australia.[120][121] In north east Arnhem Land, there is some Islamic influence on the songs, paintings, dances, prayers with certain hymns to Allah and funeral rituals like facing west during prayers, roughly the direction of Mecca, and ritual prostration reminiscent of the Muslim sujud.[119] As a result of Malay indentured laborers, plenty of families in Northern Australia have names like Doolah, Hassan and Khan.[119] Notable Aboriginal Muslims include the boxer Anthony Mundine and Rugby League footballer Aidan Sezer.[122] Many indigenous converts are attracted to Islam because they see a compatibility between Aboriginal and Islamic beliefs,[123][124] while others see it as a fresh start and an aid against common social ills afflicting indigenous Australians, such as alcohol and drug abuse.[119]

Some academics who have studied these issues have come to less positive conclusions regarding the relationship between the Aboriginal people and the visiting trepangers.[16]: 65–67  [16]: 76  [17]: 138  [18]: 81–82 

Albanian Muslims edit

In the late twentieth century, 80% of Albanian speakers in Australia followed Islam.[38] In the twenty first century, the largest Albanian communities in Australia, Shepparton and Melbourne's suburb of Dandenong in Victoria are mostly Muslims.[125] Muslim Albanian communities exist in Western Australia, South Australia, Queensland, New South Wales and the Northern Territory.[126]

As Islam is the dominant religion among Albanian Australians, it has given the community a sense of unity and the capacity and resources to construct their own mosques.[38][127][128] They have symbolised the Albanian community's permanent settlement in Australia.[129] Mosques serve as important centres for community activities and are pivotal toward retaining the religious identity of Albanian Australians.[43] Albanian representatives serve in most federal Islamic organisations, with some in senior positions.[130][131] In the few areas of concentrated Albanian settlement, their small numbers shaped local areas through the construction of their first mosques or becoming a sizable proportion of the school Muslim population.[132] The foundations created by Albanian Australians have attracted future Muslim migrants to areas which have an existing mosque or services assisting with settlement.[132]

Albanians perform certain Muslim practices. Muslim head coverings are worn mainly by a few older women, Ramadan fasts are adhered to by some people and in Shepparton, Islam is influenced by Sufi Bektashism from Albania.[133][134]

Bangladeshi Muslims edit

According to the 2016 Australian Census, Bangladeshi origin population were around 55,000; among them about 33,000 were living in NSW. Bangladeshi Muslims are located primarily in Rockdale, Lakemba, Bankstown and many suburbs in Western Sydney region with a mosque in Sefton[61] and in the south-east of Melbourne, with a mosque at Huntingdale.[135] The Sefton Mosque has been linked to the Tablighi Jamaat School of Islam[136] and has hosted Hizb ut-Tahrir.[137] For Bangladeshi Muslims attending the Huntingdale Mosque, all Islamic lunar months, such as Ramadan are observed using local moon-sightings, rather than being based on Middle-Eastern, or other, timings.[138][139] According to the 2016 Australian census, 81.2% of the Bangladesh-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[140]

Bosnian Muslims edit

 
Rochedale Mosque in Brisbane Australia

Bosnian Muslims have predominantly arrived in Australia after 1992, with most of the community living in the south east of Melbourne and in the south west of Sydney. There are Bosnian run mosques in Deer Park, Noble Park, Penshurst and Smithfield.[141] According to the 2016 Australian census, 23.2% of the Bosnia and Herzegovina-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[142]

Egyptian Muslims edit

Egyptian Muslims in Sydney are represented by The Islamic Egyptian Society.[143] The Society has managed the Arkana College[144] in Kingsgrove since 1986. It is reported that enrolments for its 203 co-educational places are booked out until 2020.[145] According to the 2016 Australian census, 15.6% of the Egypt-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[146]

Indonesian Australians edit

Though Islam is the majority religion in Indonesia, Muslims are the minority among Indonesians in Australia.[147] In the 2006 Australian Census, only 8,656 out of 50,975 Indonesians in Australia, or 17%, identified as Muslim. However, in the 2011 census, that figure rose to 12,241 or 19.4%,[148] 18.9% in 2016, and 19.3% in 2021.

Iraqi Australians edit

Iraqi Muslims mainly came to the country as a refugees after the Iran–Iraq War, failed 1991 uprisings in Iraq, and then post-2003. They predominately settled in the western suburbs of Sydney, such as Fairfield and Auburn. According to the 2016 Australian census, 31.4% of the Iraqi-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[149]

Kurdish Muslims edit

Kurdish Muslims have predominantly arrived in Australia since the second half of the 1980s, with most of the community settling in Melbourne and Sydney. Although the large majority of the Kurdish Australians are Muslims, there are no registered Kurdish run mosques in Australia.[150]

Lebanese Muslims edit

Lebanese Muslims form the core of Australia's Muslim Arab population, particularly in Sydney where most Arabs in Australia live. Approximately 3.4% of Sydney's population are Muslim. Approximately 4.2% of residents in Greater Melbourne are Muslim,[117] and Sydney Road in Brunswick and Coburg is sometimes called 'Little Lebanon'.[151]

In November 2016, Immigration Minister, Peter Dutton said that it was a mistake of a previous administration to have brought out Lebanese Muslim immigrants.[152] Foreign Minister, Julie Bishop said Mr Dutton was making a specific point about those charged with terrorism offences. "He made it quite clear that he respects and appreciates the contribution that the Lebanese community make in Australia".[153]

According to the 2016 Australian census, 43.5% of the Lebanon-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[154]

Somali Muslims edit

Although the first Somali community in Victoria was established in 1988, most Somalis began to settle in the country in the early 1990s following the civil war in Somalia.[155] Somalis are active in the wider Australian Muslim community, and have also contributed significantly to local business.[156] According to the 2016 Australian census, 93.4% of the Somalia-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[157]

Turkish Muslims edit

Turkish Muslims are a significant segment of the Australian Muslim community. Melbourne has the largest Turkish community in Australia,[158] with the majority of Turkish Muslims living around Broadmeadows and other northern suburbs. The majority of Turkish Muslims in Sydney are from Auburn, Eastlakes and Prestons. Despite still having a large Turkish population in Auburn and Eastlakes, According to the 2016 Australian census, 64.0% of the Turkey-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[159]

Malay Muslims edit

According to the 2016 Australian census, only 5.2% of the Malaysia-born population in Australia was Muslim by faith.[160]

Discrimination edit

According to some scholars, a particular trend of anti-Muslim prejudice has developed in Australia since the late 1980s.[161] Since the 2001 World Trade Center attacks in New York, and the 2005 Bali bombings, Islam and its place in Australian society has been the subject of much public debate.[162]

A report published in 2004 by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission pointed to many Muslim Australians who felt the Australian media was unfairly critical of, and often vilified their community due to generalisations of terrorism and the emphasis on crime. The use of ethnic or religious labels in news reports about crime was thought to stir up racial tensions.[163]

After the White Australia immigration laws were replaced with multicultural policies the social disadvantage of Muslims was thought to have been alleviated. Some sources, however, note that Muslims now face some disadvantages on account of their religion.[19]: 15–16  At times there has been opposition to the construction of new mosques in Australia. A 2014 report from the Islamic Sciences and Research Academy, University of Western Sydney, on mosques in New South Wales found that 44 percent of mosques in the state had "experienced resistance from the local community when the mosque was initially proposed". In around 20 percent of these cases opposition was from a small number of people.[164]

According to Michael Humphrey, a professor of sociology at the University of Sydney, much of Islamic culture and organisation in Australia has been borne of the social marginalisation experiences of Muslim working class migrants. This "immigrant Islam" is often viewed by the host society as a force of "cultural resistance" toward the multicultural and secular nature of the general Australian culture. Muslim practices of praying, fasting and veiling appear as challenging the conformity within public spaces and the values of gender equality in social relationships and individual rights. The immigrant Muslims are often required to "negotiate their Muslimness" in the course of their encounters with Australian society, the governmental and other social institutions and bureaucracies.[165]

A poll of nearly 600 Muslim residents of Sydney released in November 2015 found that the respondents were three to five times more likely to have experienced racism than the general Australian population. However, approximately 97 per cent of the Muslim respondents reported that they had friendly relations with non-Muslims and felt welcome in Australia.[166]

In an Australia-wide survey published in November 2015, which was based on 1,573 interviews, which asked, "Are Muslims that live in Australia doing enough to integrate into the Australian community, or should they be doing more?", only 20% of respondents thought Muslims are currently "doing enough".[167][168]

A poll conducted by the University of South Australia's International Centre for Muslim and non-Muslim Understanding which was released in 2016 found that 10 per cent of Australians have hostile attitudes towards Muslims.[169] The accompanying report concluded that "the great majority of Australians in all states and regions are comfortable to live alongside Australian Muslims".[170]

A Council for the Prevention of Islamophobia Inc has been established. An Australian speaking tour by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, was proposed for April 2017. Because of her alleged Islamophobia, the Council for the Prevention of Islamophobia told organisers that there would be 5,000 protesters outside the Festival Hall in Melbourne if she was to speak at that venue.[171] Her Australian tour was cancelled.[172][171] It is likely that Australian Muslims are facing up to six times exclusion from the society.[173]

Views on homosexuality edit

In line with the views of most Islamic scholars worldwide, Islamic leaders in Australia generally believe that homosexuality is not permitted by their faith.[174]

In June 2016, the president of the Australian National Imams Council (ANIC), Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman participated in an Iftar dinner at Kirribilli House hosted by the Prime Minister. The Prime Minister said he would not have been invited Alsuleiman had he known of his position regarding homosexuals.[175] The sheikh had previously spoken about the "evil actions" of homosexuality.[176] Australia's Grand Mufti, Ibrahim Abu Mohamed has defended Alsuleiman, saying Islam has a, "longstanding" position on homosexuality" which "no person can ever change". He said that any attempt to call out its teachings could lead to radicalisation.[177] ANIC treasurer Imam Mohamed Imraan Husain said, "Islam prevents lesbianism and being gay." Uthman Badar spokesman for Hizb ut-Tahrir (Australia), said that Mr Turnbull was condemning the "normative Islamic position on homosexuality".[178]

Yusuf Peer, president of the Council of Imams Queensland, in referring to the sharia law death penalty for homosexuality said, "that is what Islam teaches and that will never change."[179] The Imam of Australia's largest mosque, located in Lakemba, NSW, Shaykh Yahya Safi has said, "In Islam we believe it's a major sin to have such relations between men and men, a sexual relation. We don't discuss this because it's obvious."[180]

In August 2017 the National Imams Council issued a statement opposing the proposed introduction of same-sex marriage in Australia, and several individual religious leaders have also argued against same-sex marriage. However, some Australian Muslims support same-sex marriage, and the Muslims for Progressive Values and Muslims for Marriage Equality groups have campaigned in favour of such a reform.[174] As of September 2017, there was no polling data on the Australian Islamic community's views on this issue.[181]

Employment, education and crime edit

As of 2007, average wages of Muslims were much lower than those of the national average, with just 5% of Muslims earning over $1000 per week compared to the average of 11%. Unemployment rates amongst Muslims born overseas were higher than Muslims born in Australia.[162] Muslims are over-represented in jails in New South Wales, at 9% to 10% of the prison population, compared to less than 3% within the NSW population.[182][183]

In literature and film edit

There are a number of notable works in Australian literature that discuss the Muslims during the "Afghan period" (1860-1900).[19]: 10 

  • The Camel in Australia, by Tom L. McKnight
  • Fear and Hatred, by Andrew Markus
  • Afghans in Australia, by Michael Cigler
  • Tin Mosques and Ghantowns, by Christine Stevens
  • Ali Abdul v The King, by Hanifa Deen
  • Australia's Muslim Cameleers: Pioneers of the inland, 1860s–1930s, by Dr Anna Kenny

Veiled Ambition is a documentary created by Rebel Films for the SBS independent network following a Lebanese-Australian woman named Frida as she opens a shop selling fashionable clothing for Muslim women on Melbourne's Sydney Road. The documentary follows Frida as she develops her business in Melbourne while juggling a husband and home in Sydney and a pregnancy.[184] Veiled Ambition won the Palace Films Award for Short Film Promoting Human Rights at the 2006 Melbourne International Film Festival.[185]

Ali's Wedding is an Australian film based on a true story of an Iraqi Shia immigrant family. It depicts some of the religious and social practices of the Shia community in Australia.

Notable figures edit

See also edit

References edit

  • CIA Factbook[186]
  • US State Department's International Religious Freedom Report 2006[187]
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Further reading edit

  • Ali, Jan A. Islam and Muslims in Australia: Settlement, Integration, Shariah, Education and Terrorism. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2020.
  • Aslan, Alice. "Islamophobia In Australia"
  • Al-Momani, Kais; Dados, Nour; Maddox, Marion; Wise, Amanda (2010). (PDF). Department of Social Security. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 September 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  • , By Islamic Museum of Australia. Author: Moustafa Fahour
  • Cook, Abu Bakr Sirajuddin; Yucel, Salih (2016). "Australia's Indigenous Peoples and Islam: Philosophical and Spiritual Convergences between Belief Structures". Comparative Islamic Studies. 12 (1–2): 165–185. doi:10.1558/cis.37033. ISSN 1743-1638.
  • Cleland, Bilal. . Melbourne: Islamic Council of Victoria, 2002.
  • Deen, Hanifa. . Online: National Archives of Australia, 2007.
  • Drew, Abdul Shaheed. Muslims in Australia since the 1600s
  • Kabir, Nahid. Muslims in Australia: Immigration, Race Relations and Cultural History. London: Kegan Paul, 2004.
  • Kabir, Nahid (July 2006). "Muslims in a 'White Australia': Colour or Religion?". Immigrants and Minorities. 24 (2): 193–223. doi:10.1080/02619280600863671. S2CID 144587003.
  • Saeed, Abdullah. Islam in Australia. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 2003.
  • Saeed, Abdullah and Shahram Akbarzadeh, eds. Muslim Communities in Australia. Sydney: UNSW Press, 2001.
  • Stephenson, Peta. Islam Dreaming: Indigenous Muslims in Australia. Sydney: UNSW Press, 2010.
  • Stevens, Christine. Tin Mosques and Ghantowns.
  • Woodlock, Rachel and John Arnold (eds). Isolation, Integration and Identity: The Muslim Experience in Australia. Special Issue of The La Trobe Journal. Melbourne, Victoria: State Library of Victoria Foundation, 2012.
  • B Amin, Umar. Muslim Employemnet in Commonwealth Department and Agencies in context of Access and Equity. Tarbiya; Journal of Education in Muslim Society, Jun 2016.

External links edit

  • Islam in Australia - at Oxford Bibliographies Online (2013; subscription only for full content)
  • Islamic Museum of Australia
  • – historical community biography produced by the National Archives of Australia
  • Wotherspoon, Garry (2015). "Muslims in Sydney". Dictionary of Sydney. [CC-By-SA]

islam, australia, islam, second, largest, religion, australia, according, 2021, census, australia, combined, number, people, self, identified, muslims, australia, from, forms, islam, constituted, people, total, australian, population, that, total, muslim, popu. Islam is the second largest religion in Australia According to the 2021 Census in Australia the combined number of people who self identified as Muslims in Australia from all forms of Islam constituted 813 392 people or 3 2 of the total Australian population 1 2 That total Muslim population makes Islam in all its denominations and sects the second largest religious grouping in Australia after all denominations of Christianity 43 9 3 also including non practicing cultural Christians The Adelaide Mosque in Adelaide South Australia is amongst the oldest mosques in Australia having been built in 1888 89 Demographers attribute Muslim community growth trends during the most recent census period to relatively high birth rates and recent immigration patterns 4 5 Adherents of Islam represent the majority of the population in Cocos Keeling Islands an external territory of Australia 6 The vast majority of Muslims in Australia are Sunni with significant minorities belonging to the Shia denomination The followers of each of these are further split along different Madhhab schools of thought within Islamic jurisprudence for the interpretation and practice of Islamic law and Sub Sect There are also practitioners of other smaller denominations of Islam such as Ibadi Muslim Australians of Omani descent and approximately 20 000 Druze Australians whose religion emerged as an offshoot of Islam which arrived in Australia with the immigration of Druze mainly from Lebanon and Syria There are also Sufi Islamic mysticism minorities among Muslim practitioners in Australia 7 While the overall Australian Muslim community is defined largely by a common religious identity Australia s Muslims are not a monolithic community The Australian Muslim community has traditional sectarian divisions and is also extremely diverse racially ethnically culturally and linguistically 8 Different Muslim groups within the Australian Muslim community thus also espouse parallel non religious ethnic identities with related non Muslim counterparts either within Australia or abroad 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prior to 1860 1 2 1860 onward cameleers and pearlers 1 3 20th century 1 3 1 Post war migration 1 3 2 1990s 1 4 21st century 2 Islamic denominations in Australia 2 1 Sunni 2 2 Shia 2 3 Others 2 4 Sufi 2 5 Sectarian tensions 3 Religious life 3 1 Organisations 3 2 Halal certification 4 Demography 4 1 Historical population 4 2 Areas 4 3 Communities 4 3 1 Aboriginal Muslims 4 3 2 Albanian Muslims 4 3 3 Bangladeshi Muslims 4 3 4 Bosnian Muslims 4 3 5 Egyptian Muslims 4 3 6 Indonesian Australians 4 3 7 Iraqi Australians 4 3 8 Kurdish Muslims 4 3 9 Lebanese Muslims 4 3 10 Somali Muslims 4 3 11 Turkish Muslims 4 3 12 Malay Muslims 4 4 Discrimination 4 5 Views on homosexuality 4 6 Employment education and crime 5 In literature and film 6 Notable figures 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editPrior to 1860 edit Islam has been in Australia since the 1700s when Makassar traders were long term visitors to Arnhem land now Northern Territory 10 A dance among the Warramiri people refers to a dreamtime creational being is given the name Walitha Walitha which is an adaptation of the Arabic phrase Allah ta ala God the exalted 11 The Dreaming creation figure Walitha walitha is also known as Allah 11 In the Warramiri tradition Walitha walitha descends from heaven to re establish order from infighting and violence between different groups in Arnhem land Indigenous Australians share this ceremony known as the Wurramu with the people of Macassar Indonesia but the Aboriginal version is a mortuary ritual Aboriginal elders explain on an outside level the dance performance is about the new world introduced to Aborigines in pre colonial times as a result of this first contact experience but on an inside level they focus on the Aboriginal deaths that occurred as a consequence of contact with these fishing peoples from the north of Australia The inside meaning of the ritual relates to the passage of the soul of the deceased to a heavenly paradise above the abode of Allah 10 Main article Makassan contact with Australia Indonesian Muslims trepangers from the southwest corner of Sulawesi visited the coast of northern Australia from at least the eighteenth century 12 to collect and process trepang a marine invertebrate prized for its culinary and medicinal values in Chinese markets Remnants of their influence can be seen in the culture of some of the northern Aboriginal peoples Regina Ganter an associate professor at Griffith University says Staying on the safe grounds of historical method the beginning of the trepang industry in Australia can be dated to between the 1720s and 1750s although this does not preclude earlier less organised contact Ganter also writes the cultural imprint on the Yolngu people of this contact is everywhere in their language in their art in their stories in their cuisine 13 According to anthropologist John Bradley from Monash University the contact between the two groups was a success They traded together It was fair there was no racial judgement no race policy Even into the early 21st century the shared history between the two peoples is still celebrated by Aboriginal communities in Northern Australia as a period of mutual trust and respect 14 Others who have studied this period have come to a different conclusion regarding the relationship between the Aboriginal people and the visiting trepangers Anthropologist Ian McIntosh 15 has said that the initial effects of the Macassan fishermen were terrible which resulted in turmoil 16 65 67 with the extent of Islamic influence being indeterminate 16 76 In another paper McIntosh concludes strife poverty and domination is a previously unrecorded legacy of contact between Aborigines and Indonesians 17 138 A report prepared by the History Department of the Australian National University says that the Macassans appear to have been welcomed initially however relations deteriorated when aborigines began to feel they were being exploited leading to violence on both sides 18 81 82 A number of Mohammedans were listed in the musters of 1802 1811 1822 and the 1828 census and a small number of Muslims arrived during the convict period Beyond this Muslims generally are not thought to have settled in large numbers in other regions of Australia until 1860 19 10 Muslims were among the earliest settlers of Norfolk Island while the island was used as a British penal colony in the early 19th century They arrived from 1796 having been employed on British ships They left following the closure of the penal colony and moved to Tasmania The community left no remnants only seven permanent residents of the island identified themselves as non Christian in a 2006 census 20 21 22 1860 onward cameleers and pearlers edit Further information Afghan cameleers in Australia and Pearling in Western Australia nbsp 19th century mosque in cemetery Bourke New South Wales Among the early Muslims were the Afghan camel drivers who migrated to and settled in Australia during the mid to late 19th century Between 1860 and the 1890s a number of Central Asians came to Australia to work as camel drivers Camels were first imported into Australia in 1840 initially for exploring the arid interior see Australian camel and later for the camel trains that were uniquely suited to the demands of Australia s vast deserts The first camel drivers arrived in Melbourne Victoria in June 1860 when eight Muslims and Hindus arrived with the camels for the Burke and Wills expedition The next arrival of camel drivers was in 1866 when 31 men from Rajasthan and Baluchistan arrived in South Australia with camels for Thomas Elder Although they came from several countries they were usually known in Australia as Afghans and they brought with them the first formal establishment of Islam in Australia 23 nbsp The grave of an Afghan cameleer Cameleers settled in the areas near Alice Springs and other areas of the Northern Territory and inter married with the Indigenous population The Adelaide South Australia to Darwin Northern Territory railway is named The Ghan short for The Afghan in their memory 24 The first mosque in Australia was built in 1861 at Marree South Australia 25 The Great Mosque of Adelaide was built in 1888 by the descendants of the Afghan cameleers The Broken Hill Mosque at North camel camp was built by the cameleers between 1887 and 1891 26 During the 1870s Muslim Malay divers were recruited through an agreement with the Dutch to work on Western Australian and Northern Territory pearling grounds By 1875 there were 1800 Malay divers working in Western Australia Most returned to their home countries citation needed One of the earliest recorded Islamic festivals celebrated in Australia occurred on 23 July 1884 when 70 Muslims assembled for Eid prayers at Albert Park Melbourne The Auckland Star noted the ceremony s calm demeanor stating During the whole service the worshippers wore a remarkably reverential aspect 27 20th century edit nbsp Replica of ice cream van owned by one of the killers in the 1915 Battle of Broken Hill Most of the cameleers returned to their countries after their work had dried up but a few had brought wives and settled in Australia with their families and others settled either on their own some living at the Adelaide Mosque or married Aboriginal or European women Halimah Schwerdt secretary to Mahomet Allum a former cameleer who established himself as herbalist healer and philanthropist in Adelaide became first European woman in Australia to publicly embrace Islam She was engaged to Allum in 1935 37 but there is no record of a wedding 28 He married Jean Emsley in 1940 who converted to Islam later Allam also published pamphlets and articles about Islam 29 From 1901 under the provisions of the White Australia policy immigration to Australia was restricted to persons of white European descent including white Europeans of the Muslim faith Meanwhile persons not of white European heritage including most Muslims were denied entry to Australia during this period and those already settled were not granted Australian citizenship 30 Notable events involving Australian Muslims during this early period include what has been described either as an act of war by the Ottoman Empire or the earliest terrorist attack planned against Australian civilians 31 The attack was carried out at Broken Hill New South Wales in 1915 in what was described as the Battle of Broken Hill Two Afghans who pledged allegiance to the Ottoman Empire shot and killed four Australians and wounded seven others before being killed by the police 32 nbsp Melbourne s first mosque built by the Albanian community In the 1920s and 1930s Albanian Muslims whose European heritage made them compatible with the White Australia Policy immigrated to the country 33 34 35 The Albanian arrival revived the Australian Muslim community whose ageing demographics were until that time in decline 36 and Albanians became some of the earliest post colonial Muslim groups to establish themselves in Australia 37 Some of the earliest communities with a sizable Albanian Muslim population were Mareeba Queensland and Shepparton in Victoria 38 39 40 Post war migration edit The perceived need for population growth and economic development in Australia led to the broadening of Australia s immigration policy in the post World War II period This allowed for the acceptance of a number of displaced white European Muslims who began to arrive from other parts of Europe mainly from the Balkans especially from Bosnia and Herzegovina As with the Albanian Muslim immigrants before them the European heritage of these displaced Muslims also made them compatible with the White Australia Policy 41 Albanians partook in the revival of Islamic life within Australia in particular toward creating networks and institutions for the community 42 Albanian Muslims built the first mosque in Shepparton Victoria 1960 34 43 first mosque in Melbourne 1969 38 and another in 1985 44 45 and a mosque in Mareeba Far North Queensland 1970 38 With the increase in immigration of Muslims after the war from countries such as Bosnia Albania and Kosovo the Islam in Australia developed its characteristic plurality The move proved enriching for Muslim migrants who met Muslim fellows from many different ethnic racial cultural sectarian and linguistic backgrounds and found Islam more pluralistic and more sophisticated than their countries of origin 46 Later between 1967 and 1971 during the final years of the step by step dismantling of the White Australia policy approximately 10 000 Turkish citizens settled in Australia under an agreement between Australia and Turkey From the 1970s onwards there was a significant shift in the government s attitude towards immigration and with the White Australia policy now totally dismantled from 1973 onwards instead of trying to make newer foreign nationals assimilate and forgo their heritage the government became more accommodating and tolerant of differences by adopting a policy of multiculturalism citation needed nbsp The Chullora Greenacre Mosque Larger scale Muslim migration of non White non European Muslims began in 1975 with the migration of Lebanese Muslims which rapidly increased during the Lebanese Civil War from 22 311 or 0 17 of the Australian population in 1971 to 45 200 or 0 33 in 1976 citation needed Lebanese Muslims are still the largest and highest profile Muslim group in Australia although Lebanese Christians form a majority of Lebanese Australians outnumbering their Muslim counterparts at a 6 to 4 ratio citation needed 1990s edit Trade and educational links have been developed between Australia and several Muslim countries Muslim students from countries such as Malaysia Indonesia India Bangladesh and Pakistan are among the thousands of international students studying in Australian universities quantify citation needed A number of Australian Arabs experienced anti Arab backlash during the First Gulf War 1990 91 Newspapers received numerous letters calling for Arab Australians to prove their loyalty or go home and some Arab Australian Muslim women wearing hijab head coverings were reportedly harassed in public The Australian government s Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission included accounts of racial harassment experienced by some Australian Arabs in their 1991 report on racism in Australia 19 11 13 21st century edit nbsp Kuraby Mosque Brisbane attracts large number of worshippers in Friday prayers By the beginning of the 21st century Muslims from more than sixty countries had settled in Australia While a very large number of them come from Bosnia Turkey and Lebanon there are Muslims from Indonesia Malaysia Iran Fiji Albania Sudan Somalia Egypt the Palestinian territories Iraq Afghanistan Pakistan and Bangladesh among others citation needed At the time of the 2011 census 476 000 Australians representing 2 2 percent of the population reported Islam as their religion 47 On a few occasions in the 2000s and 2010s tensions have flared between Australian Muslims and the general population The Sydney gang rapes formed a much reported set of incidents in 2000 a group of Lebanese men sexually assaulted non Muslim women In 2005 tensions between Muslims and non Muslims in the Cronulla area of Sydney led to violent rioting the incident resulted in mass arrests and criminal prosecution In 2012 Muslims protesting in central Sydney against Innocence of Muslims an anti Islam film trailer resulted in rioting 48 There was an increase in anti Muslim sentiment in the aftermath of the Sydney hostage crisis on 15 16 December 2014 including a threat made against a mosque in Sydney 49 However the Muslim community also received support from the Australian public through a social media campaign 50 51 nbsp Islamic Museum of Australia in Melbourne The founding president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils has said that with moderate Muslims being sidelined by those promoting more fundamentalist views there is a need to be more careful in regard to potential Australian immigrants Keysar Trad has said moderate Muslims need to take back control 52 An article in The Australian in May 2015 opined Most Muslims want the peace and prosperity that comes from an Islam that coexists with modernity it is a fanatical fringe that seeks to impose a fabricated medieval Islam It describes Dr Jamal Rifi as a brave insider who is working to assist the cause of good Muslims who are struggling for the soul of Islam 53 Islamic denominations in Australia editSee also Islamic schools and branches Most Australian Muslims are Sunni with Shia Sufi and Ahmadiyya as minorities 54 Sunni edit In Sydney adherents of the Sunni denomination of Islam are concentrated in the suburb of Lakemba and surrounding areas such as Punchbowl Wiley Park Bankstown and Auburn In Australia there are also groups associated with the hardline Salafi branch of Sunni Islam including the Islamic Information and Services Network of Australasia 55 and Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamaah Association Australia ASWJA 56 While their numbers are small 57 the ASWJA is said to punch above its weight 8 There are communities of NSW Muslims who adhere to Tablighi Jamaat form of Islam and worship at the Granville Al Noor Masjid which is led by Sheik Omar El Banna 58 59 Similarly many Bangladeshi Tablighi Jamaat Muslims 60 worship at mosques in Seaton NSW 61 and in Huntingdale Victoria 62 Dawateislami which is a non political Islamic organisation based in Pakistan has adherents in Australia 63 In 2015 Wikileaks cables released information that Saudi Arabia closely monitors the situation of Islam and Arab community in Australia whilst at the same time spending considerately to promote its fundamentalist version of Sunni Islam within the country 64 Shia edit nbsp Shi a commemorating Ashura outside the Opera House Sydney The Shi a denomination of Islam is centred in the St George Campbelltown Fairfield Auburn and Liverpool regions of Sydney with the al Zahra Mosque built in Arncliffe in 1983 65 and the Al Rasool Al A dham Mosque serves the region in Bankstown In 2008 the mainstream Shia community numbered 30 000 followers nationally 66 In October 2004 Sheikh Mansour Leghaei established the Imam Hasan Centre 67 in Annangrove NSW In November 2014 up to 3 000 Shi a Muslims marched in Sydney on the annual Ashura Procession to mark the death of the prophet s grandson 68 69 In November 2015 there was Ashura march in Sydney citation needed and a Victorian school observed Muharram 70 Others edit There are also others from smaller non mainstream sects of Islam including approximately 20 000 Alawites from Turkish Syrian and Lebanese backgrounds 71 They have at least one school called Al Sadiq College with campuses in the Sydney suburbs of Yagoona and Greenacre 72 There is also a population of the related though distinct Alevis 73 There is also an Ismaili population of unspecified size 74 75 While Dawoodi Bohra a small Ismaili Shia sect 76 has its Sydney Jamaat located in Auburn NSW 77 Additionally the Druze who practice Druzism a religion that began as an offshoot of 11th century Ismaili Islam 78 are reported to have around 20 000 followers living in Australia 79 Sufi edit The study of the history of Sufism in Australia is a fledgling discipline Initial examination indicates that the Sufis have played an important part in Muslim engagement with Australia and its peoples 80 There are many reported instances of Sufism amongst the cameleers though the best available evidence of this to date exists within a hand written manuscript at the historic Broken Hill mosque providing at least one instance of Qadiri Sufis amongst the cameleers 26 81 Baron Friedrich von Frankenberg who was inspired by the man who first brought to the West Inayat Khan moved to Australia from Germany with his family in 1927 The baron and his Australian wife were well liked and students would study Sufism under von Frankenberg at their home in Camden New South Wales In 1939 he organised the visit of a renowned Sufi leader or Murshida and devotee of Khan known as Murshida Rabia Martin Born Ada Ginsberg the daughter of Russian Jewish immigrants to the US Martin s visit was of great significance because of her link to Khan After the baron s death in 1950 the poet and artist Francis Brabazon student of Meher Baba another early spiritual teacher took up a leadership role 46 However there is some contention regarding the extent to which this group adhered to Islamic practice limiting the extent to which this group can be considered a representation of Islam in Australia Currently there are communities representing most of the major Sufi Orders within Australia including but not limited to the Mevlevi Rifaii Naqshbandiyya 82 and Burhaniyya Amongst these Sufi communities it is estimated there are at least 5 000 adherents 83 Sectarian tensions edit Conflict between religious groups in the Middle East are reflecting as tensions within the Australian community 84 85 86 87 and in the schools 88 Religious life editThe Australian Muslim community has built a number of mosques and Islamic schools and a number of imams and clerics act as the community s spiritual and religious leaders In 1988 the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils AFIC appointed Sheikh Taj El Din Hilaly as the first Grand Mufti of Australia and New Zealand citation needed In 2007 Hilaly was succeeded by Fehmi Naji in June 2007 89 who was succeeded by the current Grand Mufti Ibrahim Abu Mohamed in September 2011 90 nbsp Sunshine Mosque located in Melbourne serves the Turkish Cypriot community Fatwas edicts based on Islamic jurisprudence which aim to provide guidance to Muslim Australians in the personal individual and private spheres of life 91 are issued by various Australian Islamic authorities 92 93 Organisations edit Main article Islamic organisations in Australia A number of organisations and associations are run by the Australian Islamic community including mosques private schools and charities and other community groups and associations Broad community associations which represent large segments of the Australian Muslim public are usually termed Islamic councils Some organisations are focused on providing assistance and support for specific sectors within the community such as women Two organisations with strong political emphasis are Hizb ut Tahrir 94 which describes itself as a political party whose ideology is Islam 95 96 and Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamaah Association ASWJA 97 98 A number of financial institutions have developed Sharia compliant finance products 99 with university courses leading to Islamic financial qualifications also being established 100 Other Australian Islamic organisations have been set up to manage sharia compliant investments superannuation 101 102 Islamic wills 103 and zakat management 104 105 Halal certification edit Main article Halal certification in Australia There are close to two dozen Halal certification authorities in Australia Halal meat and meat product exports to the Middle East and Southeast Asia have greatly increased from the 1970s onwards this expansion was due in part to efforts of the AFIC 19 151 Halal certification has been criticised by anti Halal campaigners who argue that the practice funds the growth of Islam results in added costs a requirement to officially certify intrinsically halal foods and with consumers required to subsidise a particular religious belief 106 An inquiry by an Australian Senate committee which concluded in December 2015 found the current system is lacklustre and made recommendations for improvement 107 It found there was no evidence to support claims that the profits of halal certification are used to fund terrorism 108 109 The report recognised that halal certification has economic benefits for Australia because of increased export opportunities 107 It recommended that the federal government increase its oversight of halal certifiers to address fraudulent conduct with halal products to be clearly labelled and for meat products sourced from animals subject to religious slaughter to be specifically labelled 110 It said that it had heard credible reports suggesting that the lack of regulation has been unscrupulously exploited In tabling the report committee chairman Sam Dastyari said Some certifiers are nothing more than scammers 111 The committee recommended a single halal certification authority 111 The committee in recommending clearer labelling specifically referred to the need for meat processors to label products sourced from animals subject to religious slaughter 112 Demography editSee also Demographics of Australia and Immigration to Australia Historical population edit Historical populationYearPop 198176 792 1991147 487 92 1 2001281 578 90 9 2011476 291 69 2 2016604 235 26 9 2021813 392 34 6 During the 1980s the Australian Muslim population increased from 76 792 or 0 53 of the Australian population in 1981 to 109 523 or 0 70 in 1986 citation needed In the 2011 Census the Muslim population was 479 300 or 2 25 an increase of 438 on the 1981 number The general increase of the Muslim population in this decade was from 147 487 or 0 88 of the Australian population in 1991 to 200 885 or 1 12 in 1996 citation needed In 2005 the overall Muslim population in Australia had grown from 281 600 or 1 50 of the general Australian population in 2001 to 340 400 or 1 71 in 2006 The growth of Muslim population at this time was recorded as 3 88 compared to 1 13 for the general Australian population citation needed From 2011 2016 Muslim population grew by 27 from 476 291 to 604 200 with majority residing in New South Wales The following is a breakdown of the country of birth of Muslims in Australia from 2001 113 There were 281 578 Muslims recorded in this survey in the 2006 census the population had grown to 340 392 114 48 of Australian born Muslims claimed Lebanese or Turkish ancestry 113 The distribution by state of the nation s Islamic followers has New South Wales with 50 of the total number of Muslims followed by Victoria 33 Western Australia 7 Queensland 5 South Australia 3 ACT 1 and both Northern Territory and Tasmania sharing 0 3 citation needed The majority of people who reported Islam as their religion in the 2006 Census were born overseas 58 198 400 114 Of all persons affiliating with Islam in 2006 almost 9 were born in Lebanon and 7 were born in Turkey 115 Areas edit nbsp At the 2011 census people who were affiliated with Islam as a percentage of the total population in Australia divided geographically by statistical local area nbsp At the 2011 census people who were affiliated with Islam as a percentage of the total population in Sydney divided geographically by postal area According to the 2016 census the Muslim population numbered 604 235 individuals of whom 42 live in Greater Sydney 31 in Greater Melbourne and 8 in Greater Perth The states and territories with the highest proportion of Muslims are New South Wales 3 58 and Victoria 3 32 whereas those with the lowest are Queensland 0 95 and Tasmania 0 49 116 4 2 of people in Greater Melbourne are Muslim 117 Many Muslims living there are Bosnian and Turkish Melbourne s Australian Muslims live primarily in the northern suburbs surrounding Broadmeadows mostly Turkish Coburg Brunswick Epping mostly Lebanese and Truganina Tarneit mostly Indian They also form communities in outer south eastern suburbs such as Dandenong and Hallam mostly Afghan and Pakistani Very few Muslims live in rural areas with the exceptions of the sizeable Albanian and Turkish communities in Shepparton which has Victoria s oldest mosque and Malays in Katanning Western Australia A community of Iraqis have settled in Cobram on the Murray River in Victoria 118 An Albanian Muslim community resides in Mareeba who established Queensland s second oldest mosque Perth also has a Muslim community focussed in and around the suburb of Thornlie where there is a mosque Perth s Australian Islamic School has around 2 000 students on three campuses Mirrabooka and Beechboro contain predominantly Bosnian communities The oldest mosque in Perth is the Perth Mosque on William Street in Northbridge It has undergone many renovations although the original section still remains Other mosques in Perth are located in Rivervale Mirrabooka Beechboro and Hepburn There are also communities of Muslims from Turkey the Indian subcontinent Pakistan India and Bangladesh and South East Asia in Sydney and Melbourne the Turkish communities around Auburn New South Wales and Meadow Heights and Roxburgh Park and the South Asian communities around Parramatta Indonesian Muslims are more widely distributed in Darwin Communities edit Muslim population by country of origin Australia 36 Lebanon 10 Turkey 8 Bosnia Herzegovina 3 6 Afghanistan 3 5 Pakistan 3 2 Indonesia 2 9 Iraq 2 8 Bangladesh 2 7 Iran 2 3 Fiji 2 Other 23 It is estimated that Australian Muslims come from 63 different backgrounds with loose associations between them 58 Aboriginal Muslims edit See also Aboriginal Australians According to Australia s 2011 census 1 140 people identify as Aboriginal Muslims almost double the number of Aboriginal Muslims recorded in the 2001 census 119 Many are converts and some are descendants of Afghan cameleers or as in the Arnhem Land people have Macassan ancestry as a result of the historical Makassan contact with Australia 120 121 In north east Arnhem Land there is some Islamic influence on the songs paintings dances prayers with certain hymns to Allah and funeral rituals like facing west during prayers roughly the direction of Mecca and ritual prostration reminiscent of the Muslim sujud 119 As a result of Malay indentured laborers plenty of families in Northern Australia have names like Doolah Hassan and Khan 119 Notable Aboriginal Muslims include the boxer Anthony Mundine and Rugby League footballer Aidan Sezer 122 Many indigenous converts are attracted to Islam because they see a compatibility between Aboriginal and Islamic beliefs 123 124 while others see it as a fresh start and an aid against common social ills afflicting indigenous Australians such as alcohol and drug abuse 119 Some academics who have studied these issues have come to less positive conclusions regarding the relationship between the Aboriginal people and the visiting trepangers 16 65 67 16 76 17 138 18 81 82 Albanian Muslims edit See also Albanian Australians In the late twentieth century 80 of Albanian speakers in Australia followed Islam 38 In the twenty first century the largest Albanian communities in Australia Shepparton and Melbourne s suburb of Dandenong in Victoria are mostly Muslims 125 Muslim Albanian communities exist in Western Australia South Australia Queensland New South Wales and the Northern Territory 126 As Islam is the dominant religion among Albanian Australians it has given the community a sense of unity and the capacity and resources to construct their own mosques 38 127 128 They have symbolised the Albanian community s permanent settlement in Australia 129 Mosques serve as important centres for community activities and are pivotal toward retaining the religious identity of Albanian Australians 43 Albanian representatives serve in most federal Islamic organisations with some in senior positions 130 131 In the few areas of concentrated Albanian settlement their small numbers shaped local areas through the construction of their first mosques or becoming a sizable proportion of the school Muslim population 132 The foundations created by Albanian Australians have attracted future Muslim migrants to areas which have an existing mosque or services assisting with settlement 132 Albanians perform certain Muslim practices Muslim head coverings are worn mainly by a few older women Ramadan fasts are adhered to by some people and in Shepparton Islam is influenced by Sufi Bektashism from Albania 133 134 Bangladeshi Muslims edit See also Bangladeshis in Australia According to the 2016 Australian Census Bangladeshi origin population were around 55 000 among them about 33 000 were living in NSW Bangladeshi Muslims are located primarily in Rockdale Lakemba Bankstown and many suburbs in Western Sydney region with a mosque in Sefton 61 and in the south east of Melbourne with a mosque at Huntingdale 135 The Sefton Mosque has been linked to the Tablighi Jamaat School of Islam 136 and has hosted Hizb ut Tahrir 137 For Bangladeshi Muslims attending the Huntingdale Mosque all Islamic lunar months such as Ramadan are observed using local moon sightings rather than being based on Middle Eastern or other timings 138 139 According to the 2016 Australian census 81 2 of the Bangladesh born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 140 Bosnian Muslims edit See also Bosnian Australian nbsp Rochedale Mosque in Brisbane Australia Bosnian Muslims have predominantly arrived in Australia after 1992 with most of the community living in the south east of Melbourne and in the south west of Sydney There are Bosnian run mosques in Deer Park Noble Park Penshurst and Smithfield 141 According to the 2016 Australian census 23 2 of the Bosnia and Herzegovina born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 142 Egyptian Muslims edit See also Egyptian Australians Egyptian Muslims in Sydney are represented by The Islamic Egyptian Society 143 The Society has managed the Arkana College 144 in Kingsgrove since 1986 It is reported that enrolments for its 203 co educational places are booked out until 2020 145 According to the 2016 Australian census 15 6 of the Egypt born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 146 Indonesian Australians edit See also Indonesian Australians Though Islam is the majority religion in Indonesia Muslims are the minority among Indonesians in Australia 147 In the 2006 Australian Census only 8 656 out of 50 975 Indonesians in Australia or 17 identified as Muslim However in the 2011 census that figure rose to 12 241 or 19 4 148 18 9 in 2016 and 19 3 in 2021 Iraqi Australians edit See also Iraqi Australians Iraqi Muslims mainly came to the country as a refugees after the Iran Iraq War failed 1991 uprisings in Iraq and then post 2003 They predominately settled in the western suburbs of Sydney such as Fairfield and Auburn According to the 2016 Australian census 31 4 of the Iraqi born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 149 Kurdish Muslims edit Kurdish Muslims have predominantly arrived in Australia since the second half of the 1980s with most of the community settling in Melbourne and Sydney Although the large majority of the Kurdish Australians are Muslims there are no registered Kurdish run mosques in Australia 150 Lebanese Muslims edit See also Lebanese Australians Lebanese Muslims form the core of Australia s Muslim Arab population particularly in Sydney where most Arabs in Australia live Approximately 3 4 of Sydney s population are Muslim Approximately 4 2 of residents in Greater Melbourne are Muslim 117 and Sydney Road in Brunswick and Coburg is sometimes called Little Lebanon 151 In November 2016 Immigration Minister Peter Dutton said that it was a mistake of a previous administration to have brought out Lebanese Muslim immigrants 152 Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Mr Dutton was making a specific point about those charged with terrorism offences He made it quite clear that he respects and appreciates the contribution that the Lebanese community make in Australia 153 According to the 2016 Australian census 43 5 of the Lebanon born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 154 Somali Muslims edit See also Somali Australians Although the first Somali community in Victoria was established in 1988 most Somalis began to settle in the country in the early 1990s following the civil war in Somalia 155 Somalis are active in the wider Australian Muslim community and have also contributed significantly to local business 156 According to the 2016 Australian census 93 4 of the Somalia born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 157 Turkish Muslims edit See also Turkish Australians Turkish Muslims are a significant segment of the Australian Muslim community Melbourne has the largest Turkish community in Australia 158 with the majority of Turkish Muslims living around Broadmeadows and other northern suburbs The majority of Turkish Muslims in Sydney are from Auburn Eastlakes and Prestons Despite still having a large Turkish population in Auburn and Eastlakes According to the 2016 Australian census 64 0 of the Turkey born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 159 Malay Muslims edit See also Cocos Malays According to the 2016 Australian census only 5 2 of the Malaysia born population in Australia was Muslim by faith 160 Discrimination edit See also Islamophobia in Australia According to some scholars a particular trend of anti Muslim prejudice has developed in Australia since the late 1980s 161 Since the 2001 World Trade Center attacks in New York and the 2005 Bali bombings Islam and its place in Australian society has been the subject of much public debate 162 A report published in 2004 by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission pointed to many Muslim Australians who felt the Australian media was unfairly critical of and often vilified their community due to generalisations of terrorism and the emphasis on crime The use of ethnic or religious labels in news reports about crime was thought to stir up racial tensions 163 After the White Australia immigration laws were replaced with multicultural policies the social disadvantage of Muslims was thought to have been alleviated Some sources however note that Muslims now face some disadvantages on account of their religion 19 15 16 At times there has been opposition to the construction of new mosques in Australia A 2014 report from the Islamic Sciences and Research Academy University of Western Sydney on mosques in New South Wales found that 44 percent of mosques in the state had experienced resistance from the local community when the mosque was initially proposed In around 20 percent of these cases opposition was from a small number of people 164 According to Michael Humphrey a professor of sociology at the University of Sydney much of Islamic culture and organisation in Australia has been borne of the social marginalisation experiences of Muslim working class migrants This immigrant Islam is often viewed by the host society as a force of cultural resistance toward the multicultural and secular nature of the general Australian culture Muslim practices of praying fasting and veiling appear as challenging the conformity within public spaces and the values of gender equality in social relationships and individual rights The immigrant Muslims are often required to negotiate their Muslimness in the course of their encounters with Australian society the governmental and other social institutions and bureaucracies 165 A poll of nearly 600 Muslim residents of Sydney released in November 2015 found that the respondents were three to five times more likely to have experienced racism than the general Australian population However approximately 97 per cent of the Muslim respondents reported that they had friendly relations with non Muslims and felt welcome in Australia 166 In an Australia wide survey published in November 2015 which was based on 1 573 interviews which asked Are Muslims that live in Australia doing enough to integrate into the Australian community or should they be doing more only 20 of respondents thought Muslims are currently doing enough 167 168 A poll conducted by the University of South Australia s International Centre for Muslim and non Muslim Understanding which was released in 2016 found that 10 per cent of Australians have hostile attitudes towards Muslims 169 The accompanying report concluded that the great majority of Australians in all states and regions are comfortable to live alongside Australian Muslims 170 A Council for the Prevention of Islamophobia Inc has been established An Australian speaking tour by Ayaan Hirsi Ali was proposed for April 2017 Because of her alleged Islamophobia the Council for the Prevention of Islamophobia told organisers that there would be 5 000 protesters outside the Festival Hall in Melbourne if she was to speak at that venue 171 Her Australian tour was cancelled 172 171 It is likely that Australian Muslims are facing up to six times exclusion from the society 173 Views on homosexuality edit Main article Islam and homosexuality In line with the views of most Islamic scholars worldwide Islamic leaders in Australia generally believe that homosexuality is not permitted by their faith 174 In June 2016 the president of the Australian National Imams Council ANIC Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman participated in an Iftar dinner at Kirribilli House hosted by the Prime Minister The Prime Minister said he would not have been invited Alsuleiman had he known of his position regarding homosexuals 175 The sheikh had previously spoken about the evil actions of homosexuality 176 Australia s Grand Mufti Ibrahim Abu Mohamed has defended Alsuleiman saying Islam has a longstanding position on homosexuality which no person can ever change He said that any attempt to call out its teachings could lead to radicalisation 177 ANIC treasurer Imam Mohamed Imraan Husain said Islam prevents lesbianism and being gay Uthman Badar spokesman for Hizb ut Tahrir Australia said that Mr Turnbull was condemning the normative Islamic position on homosexuality 178 Yusuf Peer president of the Council of Imams Queensland in referring to the sharia law death penalty for homosexuality said that is what Islam teaches and that will never change 179 The Imam of Australia s largest mosque located in Lakemba NSW Shaykh Yahya Safi has said In Islam we believe it s a major sin to have such relations between men and men a sexual relation We don t discuss this because it s obvious 180 In August 2017 the National Imams Council issued a statement opposing the proposed introduction of same sex marriage in Australia and several individual religious leaders have also argued against same sex marriage However some Australian Muslims support same sex marriage and the Muslims for Progressive Values and Muslims for Marriage Equality groups have campaigned in favour of such a reform 174 As of September 2017 there was no polling data on the Australian Islamic community s views on this issue 181 Employment education and crime edit As of 2007 update average wages of Muslims were much lower than those of the national average with just 5 of Muslims earning over 1000 per week compared to the average of 11 Unemployment rates amongst Muslims born overseas were higher than Muslims born in Australia 162 Muslims are over represented in jails in New South Wales at 9 to 10 of the prison population compared to less than 3 within the NSW population 182 183 In literature and film editThere are a number of notable works in Australian literature that discuss the Muslims during the Afghan period 1860 1900 19 10 The Camel in Australia by Tom L McKnight Fear and Hatred by Andrew Markus Afghans in Australia by Michael Cigler Tin Mosques and Ghantowns by Christine Stevens Ali Abdul v The King by Hanifa Deen Australia s Muslim Cameleers Pioneers of the inland 1860s 1930s by Dr Anna Kenny Veiled Ambition is a documentary created by Rebel Films for the SBS independent network following a Lebanese Australian woman named Frida as she opens a shop selling fashionable clothing for Muslim women on Melbourne s Sydney Road The documentary follows Frida as she develops her business in Melbourne while juggling a husband and home in Sydney and a pregnancy 184 Veiled Ambition won the Palace Films Award for Short Film Promoting Human Rights at the 2006 Melbourne International Film Festival 185 Ali s Wedding is an Australian film based on a true story of an Iraqi Shia immigrant family It depicts some of the religious and social practices of the Shia community in Australia Notable figures editMain category Australian Muslims Randa Abdel Fattah novelist Aziza Abdel Halim female political activist Yassmin Abdel Magied mechanical engineer Mohammad Hussein al Ansari Ayatollah for Shia Islam citation needed Fawad Ahmed cricket player Ameer Ali academic and political activist Mahomet Allum c 1858 1964 Adelaide herbalist and healer former Afghan cameleer Shady Alsuleiman senior Muslim cleric Waleed Aly radio and television presenter Ed Husic trade unionist politician Anne Aly academic politician Sam Dastyari former politician Mehreen Faruqi politician Wassim Doureihi spokesman for Hizb ut Tahrir Ahmed Fahour former CEO of Australia Post Mamdouh Habib former Guantanamo Bay detainee anti war activist Abu Hamza community activist Taj El Din Hilaly Sunni Imam and Mufti Bachar Houli former Australian rules footballer Adem Yze former Australian rules footballer Nazeem Hussain comedian Rabiah Hutchinson convert wife of Mustafa Hamid John Ibrahim businessman John Ilhan businessman Usman Khawaja cricket player Mansour Leghaei Shia sheikh Rashid Mahazi soccer player Hazem El Masri rugby league player Ibrahim Abu Mohamed Grand Mufti of Australia Feiz Mohammad Muslim preacher Anthony Mundine boxer and former professional rugby league footballer Fehmi Naji Muslim Imam and Mufti Mohammed Omran ASWJA Sheikh Aamer Rahman comedian Jamal Rifi General Practitioner and community leader Osamah Sami actor Keysar Trad community and political activist Mariam Veiszadeh lawyer and community advocate Samina Yasmeen academic Waqar Younis former Pakistani fast bowler Irfan Yusuf author Samier Dandan president of Lebanese Muslim AssociationSee also edit nbsp Islam portal nbsp Australia portal Q Society of Australia 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The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 30 September 2017 Inmates banned from speaking Arabic at SuperMax jail in Goulburn 7 March 2015 Ethnic minorities and crime in Australia PDF 8 November 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 29 October 2013 Veiled Ambition Ronin Films Archived from the original on 31 August 2007 Retrieved 28 August 2007 Wilson Jake 14 August 2006 Bridging the personal political gap The Age Melbourne Retrieved 23 May 2010 The World Factbook Cia gov Retrieved 30 March 2015 Australia State gov Retrieved 30 March 2015 Further reading editAli Jan A Islam and Muslims in Australia Settlement Integration Shariah Education and Terrorism Melbourne Melbourne University Press 2020 Aslan Alice Islamophobia In Australia Al Momani Kais Dados Nour Maddox Marion Wise Amanda 2010 Political Participation of Muslims in Australia PDF Department of Social Security Archived from the original PDF on 21 September 2015 Retrieved 1 October 2017 Boundless Plains The Australian Muslim Connection By Islamic Museum of Australia Author Moustafa Fahour Cook Abu Bakr Sirajuddin Yucel Salih 2016 Australia s Indigenous Peoples and Islam Philosophical and Spiritual Convergences between Belief Structures Comparative Islamic Studies 12 1 2 165 185 doi 10 1558 cis 37033 ISSN 1743 1638 Cleland Bilal The Muslims in Australia A Brief History Melbourne Islamic Council of Victoria 2002 Deen Hanifa Muslim Journeys Online National Archives of Australia 2007 Drew Abdul Shaheed Muslims in Australia since the 1600s Kabir Nahid Muslims in Australia Immigration Race Relations and Cultural History London Kegan Paul 2004 Kabir Nahid July 2006 Muslims in a White Australia Colour or Religion Immigrants and Minorities 24 2 193 223 doi 10 1080 02619280600863671 S2CID 144587003 Saeed Abdullah Islam in Australia Crows Nest NSW Allen amp Unwin 2003 Saeed Abdullah and Shahram Akbarzadeh eds Muslim Communities in Australia Sydney UNSW Press 2001 Stephenson Peta Islam Dreaming Indigenous Muslims in Australia Sydney UNSW Press 2010 Stevens Christine Tin Mosques and Ghantowns Woodlock Rachel and John Arnold eds Isolation Integration and Identity The Muslim Experience in Australia Special Issue of The La Trobe Journal Melbourne Victoria State Library of Victoria Foundation 2012 B Amin Umar Muslim Employemnet in Commonwealth Department and Agencies in context of Access and Equity Tarbiya Journal of Education in Muslim Society Jun 2016 External links editIslam in Australia at Oxford Bibliographies Online 2013 subscription only for full content Islamic Museum of Australia Muslim Journeys historical community biography produced by the National Archives of Australia Wotherspoon Garry 2015 Muslims in Sydney Dictionary of Sydney CC By SA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islam in Australia amp oldid 1222680680, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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