When Is A Racist Comment Not A Racist Comment?
When it is utttered in Australia perhaps? No, this is not the start of a major campaign on this blog, but this story just begs to be followed up, especially after my recent comments on Racism and Australian Cricket. Let’s consider this statement, aimed at English cricketer Monty Panesar by an Australian cricket fan, “Give […]
When it is utttered in Australia perhaps?
No, this is not the start of a major campaign on this blog, but this story just begs to be followed up, especially after my recent comments on Racism and Australian Cricket.
Let’s consider this statement, aimed at English cricketer Monty Panesar by an Australian cricket fan,
“Give us a wave Monty,” the spectator reportedly shouted. “You can’t speak English you stupid Indian, I’ll have to say it in Indian.
“What are you doing playing in the English side, you’re not English.”
Apparently, according to the head of Australian cricket, James Sutherland, this is not a racist remark, or in Sutherland’s words, “I don’t think there is too much racist about that.”
In other words – it’s ok? Maybe Sutherland was attempting the kind of doublespeak evidenced by Malcolm Conn in the Australian; we might have racists but we don’t have racism. Yeah right, history is a stern judge that such an approach doesn’t go far in dealing with these kinds of social problems.
Moreover it doesn’t address the findings of the ICC, upon investigating last year’s tour by South Africa, that racism in Australian cricket was “premeditated, coordinated and calculated to get under the players’ skins.” On top of that, the UK sports minister, Richard Caborn is taking the matter rather more seriously than Sutherland.
“I’m going to be talking to my counterpart in Australia. We’ve got a little difficulty down there.”
Clearly not every Australian cricket fan is a seething racist. Far from it. But a significant minority are and they reflect a significant minority within the society at large. The attitude may not be absolute and totallywidespread, but it is persistent. That’s enough people with hardened racist views within the society to represent a real problem. Statements like those from Sutherland and Conn are cowardly and probematic because they fail to face the problem square in the face. By trying to deflect and downplay the issue both are, in fact, complicit in it.
[tags] Racism, Australia [/tags]