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‘Go Back Home’: A Familiar Taunt for Some Australians
The Australia Letter is a weekly newsletter from our Australia bureau. Sign up to get it by email. This week’s issue is written by Isabella Kwai, a reporter with the Australia bureau.
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The premise of “Go Back to Where You Came From,” an Australian reality show that debuted in 2011, is instantly intriguing: Six Australians with strong opinions on immigration retrace the journeys of recent refugees. The purpose, the show’s creators said, was to tackle the heated issue of refugee policy and show a more human side to the issue. Last year’s season even sent an anti-immigration senator to Syria.
I thought of the show this week after President Trump invoked the racist trope that gave it its name, telling four nonwhite American congresswomen on Twitter to “go back” to where they had come from.
His insult ignited a conversation about racism and American identity. More than 4,800 people wrote to The New York Times about their own experiences with the phrase. But it also touched a nerve for many in Australia.
“Barely a day goes by where I am not asked on social media to justify my presence in Australia,” said Mehreen Faruqi, a senator for the Greens party who immigrated from Pakistan. “I will never be Australian enough for some people, simply because of the color of my skin.”
One of every two Australians is an immigrant or the child of one, and as the culture has become more diverse, immigration has continued to be a central political issue.
Interestingly, Australians’ attitudes toward immigration are, on the whole, positive, said Andrew Markus, a professor at Monash University who surveys public opinion on cultural diversity. Most recognize the economic benefits of immigration, even as they dislike perceived drawbacks like overcrowding, he said.
The “fundamental change” in public discourse about immigration has been in “the power of social media,” Professor Markus said. Prejudiced and bigoted statements, he said, are now “amplified.”
The “go back” insult is offensive because it is not about citizenship, said Susan Harris Rimmer, a law professor at Griffith University in Queensland. “It’s about your skin color,” she said. “You are seen to be more loyal or disloyal depending on whether you look like the norm.”
Although far-right lawmakers have stoked the fires of ethnic division here, commentators said this week that it would be hard to imagine an Australian leader emulating Mr. Trump’s comment.
But the phrase does appear. One expert said he had seen it on bumper stickers. I saw variations of it on a few hat tags at a rural festival last year.
Some Australian pundits wonder if the remark from Mr. Trump — who has since insisted that he doesn’t have a racist bone in his body — will embolden Australians who oppose immigrants to speak out more loudly.
Have you ever been told to go back to where you came from? If you have a personal story about it, or a comment, please do write to me at [email protected] or join the discussion in the NYT Australia Facebook group — we love hearing from you.
Now, on to some of our favorite stories.
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Cheers!
I don’t know about you, but now that we’re in the dead of an Australian winter I’m finding wine to be a fun dinner companion. Earlier this year, our wine critic Eric Asimov toured Australia. Here’s a roundup of his favorite discoveries:
• Australian Wine Today: Fresh, Crunchy and ‘Smashable’: You can still find the inky blockbusters of 15 years ago, but much as America’s wine industry has reoriented toward balance, so has Australia’s.
• The Big Reverb of Australia’s Lo-Fi Wine Movement: Whether called natural or lo-fi, these winemakers are part of a global crusade to reject conventional thinking and raise important questions.
• Zen and the Art of Australian Winemaking: For Will Berliner of Cloudburst, the vines are a “dojo” that puts him in touch with nature. He also makes great chardonnays, cabernets and malbecs.
• Leaving It All Behind for the Love of Nebbiolo: Luke Lambert in the Yarra Valley makes fine syrahs and chardonnays. But he wants to grow just one grape, make one wine and do it all himself.
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Australia and the Region
• New Zealand Begins Gun Buyback Prompted by Mosque Attacks: Gun owners turned in semiautomatic weapons to the police as the first buyback events were held, prompted by the Christchurch mosque attacks.
• Trump’s Immigration Measures, Far From New, Follow Europe’s Example: Both Europe and Australia have staked out similarly hard-nosed policies.
• Will Hiding Like Counts Be Good for Instagram Users? Test Is Expanded to Australia: The social media platform theorizes that the move may reduce pressure on users.
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Around the Times:
• The Unraveling of Jeffrey Epstein: The story line of a wealthy financier who has been accused of pedophilia and sexual abuse is moving quickly. Here’s what to know.
• I Wanted to Know What White Men Thought About Their Privilege. So I Asked: A college class asks what it means to be white in America — but exploring that question as a black woman in the real world is much harder to do.
• ‘El Chapo’ Guzmán Sentenced to Life in Prison, Ending Notorious Criminal Career: He sent hundreds of tons of drugs to the United States from Mexico and caused the brutal deaths of dozens of people.
• How North Korea’s Leader Gets His Luxury Cars: Kim Jong-un parades around in Mercedes-Benzes and a Rolls-Royce, despite sanctions intended to keep North Korea from importing luxury goods. We tracked how they get there.
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