Tuesday 20 December 2011

Aliens or neighbours, terrorists or refugees?


Once more there is sharp public debate about refugee and asylum seeker policy as news arrives of more people who have died. The political response to this issue is the usual rock throwing combined with expressions of sympathy worded to suggest that it is the fault of the other Party.

What fascinates me is that while options are discussed there is almost no exploration of the assumptions and the way in which refugees and asylum seekers are to be seen and valued. It is a reflection of the sort of world we live in where there is no space for a conversation about what we value and what we seek for human life; there is only space for issues and for technical solutions.

It is not that there are no values or ideologies; it is simply that they get hidden and assumed to be beyond discussion. In Australia the framework is terrorism and border security. What will protect our space; how can the government fulfill its major task – the protection of citizens?

I am sitting at my desk trying to write Christmas sermons and reflections. I know we are not quite to that part of the story, but I am forced to think about Mary and Joseph and Jesus fleeing to Egypt in the face of a murderous dictator.

I wonder what would happen to them today were they forced to flee the illegal settlers and the army who harass people in Galilee? I guess if they flew to Australia on holiday visa and stayed on (with many thousands of others) they might have a chance – at least a chance to be heard in a more reasonable climate than if they came on the boat with a tiny number of others.

I wonder why few people mention the fact that Australia is supposed to be bound by international law to accept and properly process people seeking asylum, even if we then send the unsuccessful people back home. Why do so few people think it strange that we believe it is moral to shove refugees off-shore, forcing other countries – with a fair bit of arm twisting – to deal with issues that belong to us as a nation? What happens when we see people as neighbours and strangers to be cared for, people who are actually loved by God? Why does the fact that we live in an economically, politically, and environmentally global community seem so contrary to the obsession with border protection without compassion?

Does it not mean anything to Christians that Jesus was born outside the town, had to flee to another country, and was killed outside the walls of the city? Refugee and asylum seeker.

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