Afghan histories in Australia
Many people here in Australia are using this time to learn
about the current situation of those living in Afghanistan or seeking to flee that country. Some are also seeking
to understand the history of Australia’s relationship with
Afghan people. In the process, we are being surprised
at what we learn, especially in relation to the unsung contributions which Afghan people have made throughout
Australian history.
In the mid-nineteenth century Afghan camelmen played a
critical role in opening up the vast Australian outback to Europeans. In these times camel trains were a crucial
life support system to outback communities. The cameleers came from Afghanistan, Pakistan and the Turkish empire
and their labour and skills in hot, dry arid conditions made
possible a number of key projects including the Overland
Telegraph Line between Adelaide and Darwin, the Queensland Border Fence, the Transcontinental railway
Line between Port Augusta, South Australia and Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, and the Rabbit Proof fence and Canning
Stock Route in Western Australia. Cameleers were also vital to the early wool and mining industries What’s
more, some of the exploratory expeditions which traversed the
most inhospitable parts of Australia only survived due
to the expertise and endurance of the cameleers in the hot and waterless land (they were also dependent upon Indigenous
Australian skill and knowledge of country).
There are still remnants of these Afghan histories in
many Australian cities – the date palms in Alice Springs,
cemeteries in Broken Hill, Marree, Coolgardie and elsewhere,
and mosques in Adelaide and Perth. Camel races continue in various parts of the country, while the train
line that connects southern Australia to Alice Springs is still referred to as the ‘Ghan’ in honour of the early
contributions to this country of Afghan people. And, of course,
camels themselves remain an enduring part of life in
northern Australia.
In every book which focuses on the Afghans in this country,
after tracing the histories of Afghan contribution there are further chapters entitled: ‘No alien hawkers, please’
or’ The period of usefulness has passed’ or simply ‘Afghans
not wanted’. By the end of the nineteenth century, racial
intolerance swept across Australia directed primarily at the
Chinese, the Pacific Islanders in Queensland, and the
Afghans. Acts of violence and harassment at the local level,
linked with the national policies of The Immigration
Restriction Act, later to be known as the White Australia policy,
and refusals to grant Afghan people naturalisation (even
those who had been living in Australia for up to thirty years)
gradually debilitated the Afghan community in Australia.
Many Afghans were forced to leave the country and gradually the role of the camel trains was replaced by trains and
trucks. The Afghan people who had contributed so much to life
in opening up the outback to Euro-Australians were rewarded
for their work with harassment and exclusion.
Over the last few years, boat people fleeing from Afghanistan
have been arriving on Australia’s shores. They have been met with hostility and mandatory detention. Recently
they have been expelled from Australian waters by the use of military vessels. Many people have been
shocked at the attitudes shown towards these Afghani people who
are seeking refuge.
As we try to establish what part Australia should play
in relation to the humanitarian and refugee crisis looming in
Afghanistan and Pakistan, what would it mean if we considered
the histories of Afghan contributions to Australia? What would it mean if we also kept in mind the histories
of racist exclusion that led to the destruction of the early
Australian Afghan communities? What’s more, how could
these histories inform our response to the current crisis and how we act towards the people of Afghanistan?
For more information about these
histories see:
The Afghans in Australia
by Michael Cigler (1986: Australian
Ethnic Heritage Series. Australasian Educa Press. Blackburn Victoria)
In the tracks of the Camelmen
by Pamela Rajkowski (1987: Angus and
Robertson Publishers. North Ryde NSW)
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