For Australia's Muslims, Indonesian seafaring history gives a sense of belonging By Reuters

in DLIKE5 years ago

Shared From Dlike

Hundreds of years before Captain James Cook asserted Australia for Britain in 1770, Muslim Makassan mariners from Indonesia consistently traversed vast ocean to exchange with Aboriginal individuals in Australia's far north.  

Presently, a journey in an extraordinarily developed reproduction pontoon has revived ties between the Makassans from Sulawesi island and the Yolngu faction in upper east Arnhem Land, giving a ground-breaking message about having a place for youthful Australian Muslims.  

The task is the brainchild of the Abu Hanifa Institute, an association advancing instruction, character and comprehensiveness for Muslims in Sydney.  

"We ran a workshop with youngsters and we asked them what it intended to be an Australian and numerous individuals truly couldn't relate to that idea," Abu Hanifa's Sheik Wesam Charkawi told Reuters.  

"They felt that the talk that they hear consistently - 'Return to where you originated from', 'You don't have a place here', 'Adoration it or leave it' - that it estranged them."  

Muslims make up under 3% of Australia's populace and many report encountering bias or threatening vibe with respect to their confidence.  

The account of the Australia's "First Nations'" multi year-in addition to history on the land and their long and profound relationship with the Makassans reverberated with numerous Muslim youth. The two people groups exchanged ocean cucumbers, traded thoughts and language, between wedded and lived among one another from the 1500s or perhaps prior, as indicated by students of history.


Shared On DLIKE