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Freedom of Speech

Bulletin 2004-15

 

Articles

 
Last month I had the opportunity to visit the "Terror Museum" in Budapest. This building, on the premier avenue of Budapest, was the headquarters of the Nazi Gestapo during WW11. The same building was subsequently used by the Communist party during their domination of Hungary.

This Museum was of special interest to me, as my father was born in Budapest. Then during WW11 his family were rounded up as Jews in Bratislava and transported to Auschwitz. There all the family died in the gas chambers, except for one uncle who was a doctor who survived the war.

The Terror Museum in Budapest records for posterity a regime of terror and control beyond the imagination of most Australians. Two evil regimes of ideological domination controlled the Hungarian population using weapons of terror. Thought police monitored every citizen and every citizen was expected to be a spy on their family, friends and neighbours. Justice and freedom were extinguished.

In Australia we are starting to going down the route of thought control. The anti-vilification legislation in Victoria is now well known, through the case against the two Christian Pastors. Our Federal Treasurer, Peter Costello, correctly described this legislation as "bad law".

It is not good enough for the Christian Church to adapt to bad law by shrinking into a mode of self protection. We need to pray and act in a Godly way to see this restriction on freedom of thought removed from our statute books.

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The writer of the following article is Executive Director of the Australian Muslim Public Affairs Committee:

WHY I HAVE CHANGED MY MIND ON VILIFICATION LAWS

The Victorian anti-vilification legislation is undermining those religious freedoms it is intended to protect. Peter Costello was quite correct in his National Day of Thanksgiving address to describe it as a "bad law".

As someone who once supported their introduction and is a member of one of the minority groups they purport to protect, I can say with some confidence that these laws have served only to undermine the very religious freedoms they intended to protect. At every major Islamic lecture I have attended since litigation began against Catch the Fire Ministries, there have been small groups of evangelical Christians - armed with notepads and pens - jotting down any comment that might later be used as evidence in the present case or presumably future cases. (The Islamic Council of Victoria is suing Catch the Fire under Victoria's Racial and Religious Tolerance Act 2001.)

The organisations being targeted by these evangelical Christians are neither involved in nor supported the legal action by the Islamic Council, and yet must now suffer the consequences of having their publications and public utterances subjected to a ridiculous level of scrutiny and analysis. The hope being, I assume, that some elements of the Christian community might exact revenge on the Muslim community by way of their own vexatious legal actions.

The problem is that as long as religions articulate a sense of what is right, they cannot avoid also defining - whether explicitly or implicitly - what is wrong. If we love God, then it requires us to hate idolatry. If we believe there is such a thing as goodness, then we must also recognise the presence of evil. If we believe our religion is the only way to Heaven, then we must also affirm that all other paths lead to Hell. If we believe our religion is true, then it requires us to believe others are false.

Yet, this is exactly what this law serves to outlaw and curtail: the right of believers of one faith to passionately argue against or warn against the beliefs of another. It is obvious that criticism of one's religion is likely to offend, but just as Muslims should be entitled to aggressively criticise other faiths, likewise those same faiths should be afforded the right to voice their concerns about Islam. The idea that such speech - regardless of how wrong-headed or offensive it might appear - must be banned to protect these religious communities is a furphy: discrimination on the basis of religion was already outlawed; incitement to commit violence was already illegal; and slander was already covered by existing legal instruments.

All these anti-vilification laws have achieved is to provide a legalistic weapon by which religious groups can silence their ideological opponents, rather than engaging in debate and discussion. In doing so, people who otherwise might have been ignored as on the fringes of reality will be made martyrs, and their ideas given an airing far beyond anything they might have hoped for. And at the same time as extremist ideas are strengthened and given legitimacy by attempts to silence them, the position in our society of the religions themselves is weakened and undermined.

Who, after all, would give credence to a religion that appears so fragile it can only exist if protected by a bodyguard of lawyers?

Source: By Amir Butler, Australian Prayer Network. 

 

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