- Islam in New Zealand
Islam in
New Zealand has grown with inward immigration to that country.History
The first
Muslim s in New Zealand were Chinese golddiggers working in the Dunstan gold fields of Otago in the 1870s. In the early 1900s three importantGujarat i Muslim families came fromIndia . The first Islamic organisation in New Zealand, the “New Zealand Muslim Association” (NZMA), was established inAuckland in 1950. In 1951 the refugee boat SS Goya brought over 60 Muslim men from eastern Europe, includingMazhar Krasniqi who would later serve twice as president of the New Zealand Muslim Association. These Gujarati and European immigrants worked together in the 1950s to buy a house and convert it into an Islamic Centre in 1959. The following year the firstImam arrived in New Zealand - Maulana Said Musa Patel from theGujarat . Students from South Asia and South East Asia helped establish the other prayer rooms and Islamic centres elsewhere from the 1960s onwards, although New Zealand had a relatively tiny Muslim population until many years later.In April 1979
Mazhar Krasniqi brought together the three regional Muslim organisations of Canterbury,Wellington andAuckland , to create the first and only national Islamic body - theFederation of Islamic Associations of New Zealand (FIANZ). He was honoured for his efforts by the New Zealand government in 2002, receiving a Queens Service Medal. Later Dr HajjiAshraf Choudhary would serve as president (1984-85) before pursuing his political career and entering New Zealand parliament in 1999.Large-scale Muslim migration began in the 1970s with the migration of Fiji-Indians for work. This was exacerbated after the first
Fiji coups of 1987 . These were working class in the 1970s, followed by more professional social elements in the late 1980s. Early in the 1990s many migrants were admitted under New Zealands refugee quota, from war zones inSomalia , Bosnia,Afghanistan ,Kosovo andIraq .Cartoon Controversy
In
2006 , two newspapers in New Zealand decided to republish controversial Danish cartoons depicting Muhammad, the prophet of Islam. The Muslim community registered their displeasure through press statements and a small peaceful march in Auckland. The editors said they did not mean offence but would not back down. New Zealand Prime MinisterHelen Clark and opposition leaderDon Brash both made similar statements that the cartoons were not appreciated if they deeply offended members of the NZ community, but that such decisions were for editors to make, not politicians. Muslim leaders and the editors got together with the race relations office, and Jewish and Christian representatives in Wellington. As a result of this meeting the editors said they would not apologise but in good faith would refrain from publishing the offending images again. The New Zealand Muslim leadership, through FIANZ, then proceeded in good faith to consider the matter closed and furthermore draft letters to 52 Muslim countries asking that NZ products not be boycotted.Contemporary Islam in New Zealand
In the 2006 census 36,072 people identified themselves as Muslim - up 52.6% from 5 years earlier [ [http://www.stats.govt.nz/census/2006-census-data/quickstats-about-culture-identity/quickstats-about-culture-and-identity.htm?page=para012Master 2006 Census data] ] , and New Zealand now has a number of
mosque s in the major centres, and two Islamic schools (Al Madinah and Zayed College for Girls).The community is noted for its harmonious relations with the wider New Zealand community, with various interfaith efforts from all sides contributing to this situation. This was strained somewhat after a speech by nationalist politician
Winston Peters who during the2005 election campaign described theNew Zealand Muslim community as a "multi headed hydra, waiting to strike" and questioned their loyalty to New Zealand. [ [http://www.nzfirst.org.nz/content/display_item.php?t=1&i=2040 New Zealand First: The End Of Tolerance] , an address by Rt Hon Winston Peters to members of Far North Grey Power, Thursday 28 July 2005, Far North Community Centre, Kaitaia, 2pm.]The Muslim Students and Youth Association of NZ was formed in 1997. It is affliated to Federation of Islamic Associations of New Zealand (FIANZ). It is primarily run by students at Universities and Youth in the Community. They undertake regular activities like Islam Awareness Week (IAW), Sports Tournaments and organize Muslim Youth camps.
There are also small communities of Muslims from
Turkey , theIndian subcontinent (Pakistan ,India andBangladesh ) andSouth-East Asia , all of which communities are concentrated in the major cities ofAuckland , Hamilton, Wellington, andChristchurch . In recent years an influx of foreign students fromMalaysia andSingapore has increased the proportion of Muslims in some other centres, notably the university city ofDunedin . Dunedin'sAl-Huda mosque is reputedly the world's southernmost, and is further fromMecca than any mosque in theSouthern Hemisphere .Maori Muslims
There is a small but growing amount of conversions among the wider New Zealand population and Islam is the fastest growing religion amongst the Maori community. [ [http://www.cpifinancial.net/cpifn/inside_restricted.aspx?cid=1118&cat=IBF&in=21 Kia Ora Aotearoa] ] The 2001 census figures shows that 3000 Europeans registered as Muslim in 2001. Census figures show the number of Maori Muslims increased from 99 to 708 in the 10 years to 2001. But Kireka-Whaanga, the leader of "Aotearoa Maori Muslim Association" (AMMA), said numbers had shot up since September 11, as global media focused on radical Islam.The AMMA, the most influential
Māori Muslim movement, has roots in theHawkes Bay province. They viewtino rangatiratanga as ajihad , and that Islam is the perfect vehicle for Maori nationalism.ee also
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Islam by country
*Religion in New Zealand Notes
* Drury, Abdullah, Islam in New Zealand: The First Mosque (Christchurch, 2007) ISBN 978-0-473-12249-2
External links
* [http://www.fianz.co.nz/index.htm?wrapper.php?id=aboutus/strat_content Federation of Islamic Associations of New Zealand]
* [http://www.iman.co.nz/ International Muslim Association of New Zealand]
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