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Canadian Muslims Face High Unemployment

4-07-2015

SYDNEY – Facing a new campaign against face veil and halal food, a leading Australian Muslim leader has rejected the "ban-the-burqa" crusader of a new political “network” as ignorant, warning that these campaigns incite anti-Muslim hatred in the country.

“I don’t want to make assumptions. I believe she may not understand and out of ignorance she says these things," Maha Abdo, the CEO of United Muslim Women Association, told Anadolu Agency on Wednesday, April 1.
TORONTO – A new report released earlier this week by the Canadian Dawn Foundation has warned that unemployment is reaching high levels among Canada’s Muslims, threatening integration of the religious community in the North American country.

“Unemployment is stubbornly high among Muslims,” said Nabil Harfoush of the Dawn Foundation in presenting the report.

“Some 13.9 per cent of Muslims were unemployed in 2011, as compared with the national average of 7.8 per cent.

“All visible minorities which share ethnicities and cultures with Muslims and probably studied at the same universities fare much better than Muslims with unemployment rate of 9.9 per cent.”

Daood Hamdani compiled the report titled, Canadian Muslims – A Statistical Review. He is a pioneer writer on the evolution of Canada's Muslim community.

Hamdani’s writings cover a wide range of topics and have appeared in scholarly journals. He is the author of the highly acclaimed Canadian chapter in the Encyclopedia of Muslim Minorities, and his writings are quoted in scholarly papers and doctoral dissertations.

The report was launched at an event in Toronto and Muslim community leaders were in attendance to discuss the report’s findings.

The study is based on Statistics Canada National Household Survey 2011, which replaced the long-form census, and it was supplemented by information from other censuses and statistical studies.

“The standard factors do not fully explain the high incidence of unemployment among Muslims,” noted Hamdani in the report.

“Muslims are not concentrated in the regions of high unemployment or declining industries or in occupations for which the demand is static or falling.”

“Nor could their difficulties be attributed to a lack of language skills or below par educational qualifications because Canadian-born Muslims with degrees and diplomas from Canada also experience high unemployment.”

Underemployment

According to the study, in addition to high unemployment, underemployment is a serious problem.

Roshan Jamal, President of the Dawn Foundation, in her welcoming remarks told the gathering, “The Canadian Dawn Foundation is pleased to launch its report, Canadian Muslims – A Statistical Review.”

“The comprehensive review looks at Muslim populations in Canada, demographic transformation, involvement in electoral processes, Muslims adopting the French language, single parent families, educational profiles and the generational shifts occurring and finally, unemployment and underemployment in Muslim communities,” she added.

Based on the National Household Survey of 2011, the Canadian Muslim population reached a milestone in 2011, passing the one million mark.

In relative terms, Muslims are 3.2 per cent of the total Canadian population and rank fifth among faith communities and denominations.

The study reveals that the Canadian Muslims are an urban community, with two-thirds living in just two cities, Toronto and Montreal. Only ten cities have more than 15,000 Muslims

Daood Hamdani surmises that the growing population of Canadian Muslims can be influential in elections if they turn out to vote in larger numbers than they did in past elections.

“While Muslims are passionate about Canadian citizenship they are less enthusiastic about exercising its core right, voting,” he notes in the report.

“They are less likely to vote than other faith communities, with their voter turnout rate estimated to be hovering around 46.5 per cent.”

“Over half a million Muslims are eligible to vote, but their political geography gives them a more than proportionate influence when elections are very close,” adds Hamdani.

“Accounting for only 2.1 per cent of the electorate, they can influence the outcome of 23 constituencies in 2015."

The Canadian Dawn Foundation is a registered charity that aims at advancing, promoting, and supporting education to enhance understanding of the Islamic faith and culture for both Muslims and the Canadian general public.




"But to keep it going for so long causes me to think she just wants to incite fear and anxiety in Australians’ hearts about a particular race and faith.”

Abdo’s comments followed the launch of a new 12-point platform to support removing halal food label, halving the foreign aid budget, the opposition of any attempt to introduce shari`ah law into Australia and a special interest in all matters associated with veterans, serving members of the Australian Defense force and their families.

The new political 'network” was set up by Senator Jacqui Lambie, who was elected to Parliament in 2014 representing the Palmer United Party (PUP), but broke away in Nov. 2014

“All [12 core] policies are resonating” with supporters, Lambie’s Chief of Staff, Rob Messenger, told AA.

Trying to find a common ground, Abdo publicly debated Lambie on her stance regarding the burqa on morning television in October last year.

Challenging Lambie repeatedly to explain why she thought the burqa poses a risk, Lambie didn’t answer, citing hearing problems.

Abdo has also tried in several occasions to invite Lambie to join her and other Muslim women for a "sociable discussion."

"That’s the Australian way of doing things,” Abdo, a recipient of the Order of Australia medal and the NSW Premier’s Multicultural Medal, said.

Lambie’s response came in the form of a tweet, which stated: Jacqui Lambie would not visit a mosque “because it’s not my moral upbringing."

"I’m Australian,” she added.

Seeing these ideas as a threat to Muslims’ integration in Australia, she warned of consequences of following these hard-line politicians.

“Using anti-Muslim sentiment as a political platform is a concern,” she added.

Muslims, who have been in Australia for more than 200 years, make up 1.7 percent of its 20-million population.

Last October 2, Australia’s parliament house approved a controversial face-veil ban, stipulating that women donning burqa or niqab would be directed to the higher galleries where they could sit behind sound-proof glass.

Less than three weeks later, Australia’s parliament reversed the ban on the face-veil worn by Muslim women.

Islam sees hijab as an obligatory code of dress, not a religious symbol displaying one’s affiliations.

A niqab is a veil which covers part or most of the wearer’s face, leaving the eyes visible.

Yet, Muslim scholars believe that a woman is not obliged to cover her face or hands.

Scholars, however, believe that it is up to women to decide whether to take on the veil.
 

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