http://www.antara.co.id/en/print/?id=22272


Australian Muslims rally behind cleric criticizing women without veil

Sydney (ANTARA News) - A cleric who said women who didn't wear a veil were 
"uncovered meat" asking to be raped will keep his job as the spiritual leader 
of Australia's 350,000 Muslims. 

Sheik Taj Din al-Hilali was confirmed as Mufti of Australia on Friday after the 
governing body of Sydney's largest mosque rallied behind the Egyptian-born 
cleric. 

"The board is satisfied with the notion that certain statements made by the 
mufti was misinterpreted," Tom Zreika, head of the Lebanese Muslim Association, 
told local radio. Zreika said that as a sop to public opinion, al-Hilali 
wouldn't be preaching until he goes on the haj pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia in 
six weeks' time. 

Prime Minister John Howard, who hand-picked al-Hilali for a 14-member Muslim 
advisory panel after the London bombings in June, said remarks in Arabic in a 
fasting-month sermon to 500 worshippers that compared unveiled women to food 
left for stray cats were "appalling and reprehensible."

Howard warned Muslims they risked a backlash from other Australians if they 
continued to back al-Hilali against mainstream opinion. 

"If it is not resolved, then unfortunately people will run around saying 'Well, 
the reason they didn't get rid of him is because secretly some of them support 
his views,'" Howard was quoted by DPA as saying.

Others in his government have called on al-Hilali to be prosecuted for inciting 
sexual assault or even to be deported. 

"If you take out uncovered meat and place it outside on the street, or in the 
garden, or in the park, or in the backyard without a cover, and the cats come 
and eat it ... whose fault is it, the cats' or the uncovered meat? The 
uncovered meat is the problem," al-Hilali said. 

In an address that was tape-recorded by The Australian newspaper, Al-Hilali 
said a woman who stayed home and was veiled would be safe from sexual assault. 
"If she was in her room, in her home, in her hijab (veil), no problem would 
have occurred."

The 66-year-old apologized for the comments, saying he had "only intended to 
protect women's honour," but he refused calls for him to resign.

A defiant al-Hilali, speaking amid cheering supporters as he emerged from 
Friday prayers at Sydney's Lakemba Mosque, said he would not be resigning until 
"after we clean the White House first."

The mufti has frequently referred to Howard, United States President George W 
Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair as the "axis of evil."

Al-Hilali has stirred controversy before. He has denied the Holocaust, defended 
suicide bombers, described as "God's work" the 2001 terrorist attacks in the 
United States, and blamed Jews for "all the wars and problems that threaten the 
peace and stability of all the world."

Al-Hilali, who doesn't speak English despite having lived in Australia for 24 
years, referred in his sermon to gang rapes in Sydney in 2000 that led to 
several Muslims being sentenced to long jail terms. He was critical of the 
judges, saying they had shown no mercy. 

Only white women were victims, and they were told they were targeted because 
they were "Aussie pigs."

Howard, who had hoped an outcry over al-Hilali's defence of rape would force 
the mufti to resign, expressed frustration. 

"What has to happen in relation to this man is that the issue has to be 
resolved by his own community," Howard said. "He was not expressing Australian 
values, I can say without fear of contradiction that what he said is repugnant 
to Australian values."

Al-Hilaly, in his sermon, also caused offence by saying women were mostly to 
blame for adultery. "When it comes to adultery, it's 90 per cent the woman's 
responsibility," he said. "Why? Because a woman possesses the weapon of 
seduction."

Waleed Aly, a spokesman for the Islamic Council of Victoria, condemned 
al-Hilali and called for his resignation, saying his views sought to normalize 
immoral sexual behaviour. 

"We would have liked to have seen some form of fairly strong censure just given 
the magnitude and the gravity of the comments," Aly said. 

But other prominent Australian Muslims refused to criticise the mufti. Imam 
Abdul Jalil Sajid, the chairman of the Muslim Council of Great Britain, who is 
visiting Australia, sprang to the mufti's defence. "I know he is one of the 
greatest Muslim scholars on earth and Australia is blessed with him," Sajid 
said. (*)

Copyright © 2006 ANTARA
October 27, 2006 15:27
http://www.antara.co.id/en/print/index.php?id=22272


 

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