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posted by martyb on Saturday February 16 2019, @08:56AM   Printer-friendly
from the Better-than-a-rat-race dept.

Is a religious group a 'race' or isn't it? Is someone 'racist' if they publicly state their dislike of a religious group? An Australian tribunal has answered this question by ruling that Muslim is not a race, and as such, a person who vilifies them in public, an act which is currently illegal in Australia, would not have broken the law.

In 2016 Sonia Kruger 'called for an end to migration from Islamic countries' saying that she wanted people to feel safe when going out to celebrate Australia day. Sam Ekermawi, a Muslim, filed a complaint to the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal claiming the comments were racial vilification.

The tribunal was unable to conclude Muslims living in Australia "are a 'race' by reason of a common ethnic or ethno-religious origin" and dismissed the application. This is an important milestone in the legal and cultural development of the ocean-bound nation which is still attempting to balance the melting pot of cultures and people who have migrated to the country from all over the world. This ruling may be a key threshold for defining what the word 'race' actually means in the legal and social and cultural context and how laws will be interpreted in the future.


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  • (Score: 2) by Azuma Hazuki on Saturday February 16 2019, @11:11PM

    by Azuma Hazuki (5086) on Saturday February 16 2019, @11:11PM (#802231) Journal

    Islam and Judaism are waaaaaaaay closer together than either one wants to admit :) And closer to one another than either is to Christianity. Ironic, no?

    Halal is more or less "permitted, sanctioned," and "haraam" is "forbidden, set apart, under protection/separation." And yes, the word "harem" shares the same root, and incidentally so does the ancient Jewish practice of "herem." Which is when an entire city of enemies was designated "herem," or set aside/"dedicated to YHWH" and utterly destroyed, no plunder allowed.

    Semitic languages commonly have these triple-consonant bases for words with the varying vowel sounds in the middle giving them meaning. One reason ancient Hebrew is so incredibly hard to read is it's pretty much *just* the consonants with no vowels and no spacing...

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