Bahai News - An Exotic Tale of Afghan Islam in Australia
with Rachael Kohn
on Sunday 3/06/01
An Exotic Tale of Afghan Islam in Australia
Summary:
Born to an Aboriginal mother and an Afghan father, "Jila" is the central character of a new
Australian film, Serenades, that explores the complex interaction of Islamic, Aboriginal and
Christian cultures late in the 19th century in Central Australia. The director of Serenades,
Mojgan Khadem, is an Iranian-born Baha'i from Adelaide, whose own experience as a refugee to
Australia has made her acutely aware of women's struggle for independence, identity, and love in
traditional cultures. We also hear from historian Christine Stevens. Her books Tin
Mosques and Ghantowns and White Man's Dreaming provided the background to the film, and
Christine worked on the screenplay of Serenades with the director. Featured throughout this
week's program is the original music from the movie soundtrack composed by Davood Tabrizi.
Details or Transcript:
When Afghan cameleers cross-crossed the desert and Lutheran missionaries evangelised to the
Aboriginal inhabitants of Central Australia, a rare meeting of religions and cultures was played
out n the 19th century. And it.s the subject of a new film called Serenades.
Hello
and welcome to An Exotic Tale of Islam in Australia. I.m Rachael Kohn and you.re listening
to The Spirit of Things on Radio National.
Serenades takes place in the
dry brown desert landscape, flat desert landscape in the north of South Australia between the Ghan
town, the Afghan town of Maree which is the northernmost railhead, and a Lutheran mission station
about 80-odd kilometres to the north, in an isolated part of the, well it.s actually desert dunes
around Killalpaninna Mission Station.
Rachael Kohn: Later in the program
we.ll be speaking to historian Christine Stevens, who has worked on the film for some years and has
written two books which provided background for the story. The film is about religious conflict, a
search for identity, and the triumph of love. And although it is set in the 19th century, it.s a
film that is like a parable, which speaks to all times and all places, where religious intolerance
and misunderstanding have prevailed. And where haven.t they flourished?
The screenplay of
Serenades was written by Mojgan Kadhem. She is a member of the Baha'i faith, which has
endured its own share of oppression in its native Iran, where Baha'is are persecuted and regarded
as a deviant outgrowth of 19th century Islam.
Her aim in this film is to convey something
about the religious oppression which women in particular have endured, but more generally about the
way in which people of different religious traditions are often captive to bigotry and intolerance.
And weaving through the film is the scarlet thread of love.
Mojgan Kadhem speaks to me from
Adelaide.
Mojgan Kadhem, welcome to The Spirit of Things.
Mojgan Khadem: Thank
you.
Rachael Kohn: Mojgan, first congratulations on a very beautiful film. It.s not
easy bringing a story to the cinema that.s about religious oppression, but it is something that you
would be familiar with as a Baha'i.
Mojgan Khadem: Yes, indeed. I felt that it was a
story that I really wanted to research and delve into, that involved different religions and
different races, and I guess being a Baha'i I have experienced that first-hand and it played a very
important role in my personal journey, and I couldn.t help but want to express that in a
story.
Rachael Kohn: You were in fact a refugee in Australia, is that
right?
Mojgan Khadem: Well we were refugees when we were in Spain, but we applied for
Australian permanent residency and it took three years to obtain that visa, and then when we
arrived in Australia we had permanent residency, and so our status was not one of being a refugee
at that time.
Rachael Kohn: Your homeland is actually Iran, is that
right?
Mojgan Khadem: That.s right, that.s where I was born, yes.
Rachael
Kohn: Can you briefly tell the story about Serenades?
Mojgan Khadem: Well
Serenades is set in the 1890s and it tells the story of a young girl called Jila and her
conception takes place as a result of the liaison between an Afghan cameleer and an Aboriginal
woman. Once she is born she is very much a hybrid character in the middle of the Australian outback
and a third culture kind of plays a big role in her make-up and her development and that is the
Lutheran German missionaries where she grows up for the first seven years of her life, or nearby
that mission. So she becomes more and more kind of complex in her affinities and her allegiances.
Really she.s very confused on a spiritual level and on a cultural level.
Rachael
Kohn: Is that what attracted you to the character in a way, or propelled you to write about a
character like this? Did you draw on your own experiences, being a Baha'i in Australia, and the
sort of confusion that that might have aroused in you?
Mojgan Khadem: Well definitely
I.m inspired by the principle of unity which is a principle of the Baha'i faith, which really wants
to promote a harmonious kind of an existence no matter what cultural religion we happen to be a
part of.
But to tell you the truth I think very much on a storytelling kind of a level, and
I.m an avid reader of Joseph Campbell who is a world authority on myths and the mythical dimension
that is often included in the stories that we tell. And I believe that the most important myth of
our time is that of religious and ethnic or cultural conflicts. I think it.s a subject that is very
much all around the world, one that has brought about a great deal of conflict and a great deal of
bloodshed. The whole concept of ethnic cleansing, the religious wars that we have been witnessing
around the world.
Rachael Kohn: I guess that.s one of the reason why I thought your
film Serenades was so timely, because we are seeing a lot of religious oppression and
religious struggles against modernity, and yet in the midst of all this, there are these very
singular human stories of individuals who are trying to find their way, like Jila in the film. And
that makes them sort of universal; is that what you.re getting at?
Mojgan Khadem:
Absolutely. That.s exactly what I.m getting at. I.m telling the story of an individual character
who is very much connected to three very different ways of thought and belief. And yet there is an
essential love that she has for the Aboriginal culture, for the Afghan culture, and for the
Lutheran Christian culture, and she can.t deny that love for any one of them, so whether she likes
it or not, she is part of all these religions and all these cultures, and she cannot choose one
above the other, and that.s what makes her existence incredibly difficult.
Rachael
Kohn: And yet I did feel in the film that she suffered most under the traditional Islamic
attitudes to women, that men ruled the household, that they buy and sell their brides to the
highest bidder and which she was caught up in that. Did you yourself bring some of your own
attitudes or experiences in traditional Islamic culture and explore the way women have tried to
free themselves from some of the extreme aspects of it?
Mojgan Khadem: Well I didn.t
want to show any one culture as the baddies you know, but I can.t help but observe the way that
women are treated in the Middle East and within Islamic kind of traditions. And they are not very
much given an opportunity to have a voice or have their own choices. They.re very much under the
control of a very male oriented kind of a culture, and yet I.m not blaming anyone for this way that
things are, I.m just saying perhaps we need to question and we need to review the situation, and we
need to help the women in these cultures to have enough self esteem and enough education and enough
choice so that they can be the authors of their own destiny.
Rachael Kohn: Yes well I
actually thought that your film really captured a certain poignancy about the Afghan cameleers who
came here, because on the one hand they were proud tribesmen, but on the other hand they did meet
up with suspicion and trust of the local Europeans, and even the Aboriginals who also feared
them.
Mojgan Khadem: Yes, I think that every character that is seen as an
authoritative character, as a dictatorial character or one that brings about the oppression of
others, if you really delve into the make-up of that character you will probably find that they
have their own history of oppression, their own history of struggle, their own vulnerabilities and
they are perhaps victims of a certain prejudice in their own life, and then they, in return, make
others victims of a certain kind of control that they expect in their own family members, or people
that they can control. That.s really the character of Shir Mohammed, the father of Jila. He has his
own vulnerabilities but he also expects his immediate family to live the way he wants them to
live.
Rachael Kohn: Yes, very much so. Your film is really very good at depicting how
these different groups in 19th century South Australia were both strengthened by their beliefs, but
often in a way which left little room for basic human compassion.
Mojgan Khadem:
Exactly.
Rachael Kohn: Was that really the story behind Jila.s fate?
Mojgan
Khadem: Yes. At the end of the day I am depicting characters who are one thing or another as
far as the categories of religion and culture are concerned, and yet they are all people, and I
think that the irony of the story is that they place their categories or their tags of what
religion they are, or what culture they are, above the basic human necessities of love and
compassion, and I think when that happens you.ve got a tragedy on your hands, and that.s what it
is.
MUSIC/CLAPPING/SINGING
Father: How many times do I have to repeat
myself in this house? I was offered for 100-pounds for your bride price. How much do you think that
it.ll pay to keep up that sort of behaviour?
Woman: A hundred pounds? Who.d pay that for
her?
Father: That.s my business.
Jila: He.s not a cameleer, is he?
Father:
What does that have to do with anything? You will marry whoever I say. If I say you marry a monkey,
you say, Where do I get the bananas?
Rachael Kohn: From the film
Serenades, where the Afghan father tells his daughter Jila, born of an Aboriginal woman,
what.s in store for her.
Your main character, Jila, who we.ve been talking about, was
probably like so many Aboriginal people who were brought to Lutheran missions; they were fascinated
by the hymns and the Christmas carols, the pretty dresses, and indeed the church piano. But as
children they were unwittingly caught between two worlds. Mojgan, for this film did you speak to
Aboriginal people who.d experienced this kind of life between two cultures?
Mojgan
Khadem: I did speak to Aboriginal people, but you know, often they are incredibly shy and it
takes time before they open up and trust you enough to actually let you know a little about the
reality of their thoughts and their emotions. And with a handful of them I was able to have a
relationship where they would tell me things and in between those little stories that they would
tell me, I would find characteristics that I could introduce into my story.
But before
talking to anyone, I also had to do a lot of reading of my own, and I had to equip myself with
basic research of what went on and what.s actually written about what happened in the 1890s in the
middle of the Australian outback. And I also watched a lot of documentaries. One of the
documentaries that I watched was one called Lousy Little Sixpence, I don.t know if you.ve
ever seen it, but I found it was very, very moving and it told me a great deal about the way that
the Aboriginal girls particularly were treated and the way they felt in these missions that they
lived in, and there is a song that one of the characters sings in a women.s scene in the film, and
that song I included because one of the women in Lousy Little Sixpence tells of the way they would
sing that song around the mission. And it talks about how they would do chores and how they would
learn to wash and iron and cook and clean, and they were taught all of this at the mission in the
name of Jesus, because they would have to do all of this for Jesus because Jesus does so much for
them. It.s directly from the words of one of the ladies in that documentary, and I think if it.s
meaningful, it.s because it.s true.
Woman: We loved, it was very romantic. I
left a note at the brothel for the madam to say I.m so sick of this life; I am marrying a man who
has a black face but a white heart. Farewell, I go!
Woman: I.ve never met a woman like
you.
Woman: It.s often a better life than this cooking and cleaning.
Woman: We didn.t
even get paid for that at the mission.
Woman: Ah, but you were doing it all for
Jesus.
(SINGS) In the house and out the door,
Chopping wood and scrubbing
floor,
Washing, ironing, mending too,
Sometimes making a pot of stew.
I do it
all for Jesus, I do it all for Jesus,
I do it all for Jesus, he does so much for
me.
Rachael Kohn: I think one of the most poignant moments in the
film, perhaps the most profound moment, is when Jila yells out in frustration that she hates all
gods; she.s prayed to them and they hate her, or they don.t care for her.
Mojgan
Khadem: I remember writing and rewriting that scene and the words that Jila speaks in that
scene, and just refining it here and there, and every time I would get to it, I would find myself
crying.
Now I know that this is really silly because you.re writing something and you.re
sitting there in this room and just crying, but I did that. And a lot of people have told me that
that is a moment that they find incredibly meaningful, and I guess it was a moment that came out of
the flow of the story and the journey of the character, and I couldn.t see any other way but for
her to explode, and for once move away from here passive kind of character, into a character that
has to express the way she feels. It.s like a fire, that.s it, it.s ignited and it.s wild and it
cannot be contained no more. And she speaks words that come from a sense of feeling oppressed.
I think the word .oppression. is what I wrote very big, and I put it right in front of my
desk when I was writing, because my main character of Jila was feeling oppressed as a result of not
knowing who to turn and which god to believe in, because all of them were telling her a different
thing, were expecting different things from her, and yet she had an essential link to all of them.
She had an Aboriginal mother that she loved, and she felt a part of, and she lost and mourned over;
she has an Afghan father that provided for her and developed her character, and the woman that she
becomes, and she has the love of a little boy that she grew up with who happens to be a Christian.
She is very much linked to three different opinions, and three different gods. And of
course she prays to all of them because she has a love for all of them. And yet because there is no
harmony between them, she cannot find a harmony within herself. And so finally she
explodes.
Father: Look at yourself, a wretched black who is neither a
Christian nor a Muslim, maybe even guilty of murder, no place to go.
Johann: Father, she has
come to us for help.
Father: We can.t trust her, that girl has the devil in her. She will
devour your soul.
Johann: And her soul is less valuable than mine.
Father: She
introduces death. Johann, I beg you, hear the word of God...
Johann: Jila, please, for
God.s sake.
Jila: Don.t speak to me of God. Your God hates me, and I hate your God, I hate
all gods. I.ve prayed to them all, and I.ve prayed for them to love me and for me to love them, and
not one of them has been with me. Not one!
Johann: Jila.
Jila: They all hate
me.
Johann: Jila, you are mistaking the hatred of man for the hatred of God. God is love and
he loves you. I swear by the heavens that I have never met anyone who deserves so much
love.
MUSIC
Rachael Kohn: But isn.t this also a story of
failed gods, an indictment of religion, the Afghan men who were bigoted and vengeful, and the
Christian missionaries who are weak and ultimately racist?
Mojgan Khadem: And that is
the myth of our time. That is the myth of our time, the failure of cultures and religions if they
cannot bring an essential sense of peace to the world that we live in. If they continuously are
warlike and bring about the bloodshed of masses of people and the oppression of individuals, then
what are they doing, what are they for, and perhaps it.s best to do without them if they.re going
to do no more than oppress us.
I believe that is the myth of our time, and every time I
turn on the television it just does not change. I still hear stories from around the world on the
news that tell me that masses of people run in the streets in England recently because there is
race conflicts, and I hear that a Pakistani man who is a taxi driver cannot get any fares because
he is basically scared that anyone who enters his taxi may actually be violent towards him.
And you hear that in Afghanistan, people have to wear badges because they.re Hindu or of
another minority that is not Muslim, and you hear in the Balkans the Christians and the Muslims
cannot find a way of keeping a peaceful kind of relation. I mean it is going on around the world on
a very real basis, then what myth is bigger that, than us having to really look into that, that
aspect of our life. The race and the religious conflicts of our time, and perhaps enough is enough,
perhaps we need to on an individual level, stand up and say I have had enough of this, I don.t want
to know about any of it if it.s going to bring me in the short span of life that I.ve got on this
earth, nothing but trouble and oppression and misery.
Mojgan Khadem: Mojgan, hearing
you now, this passion that you have, makes it obvious why the film Serenades, is so powerful
even though it is slow and elegant and rather beautiful, very sensitive. It is actually quite a
powerful film. And in the end it celebrates the renewal of Jila.s Aboriginal identity, and in that
there.s a strong kind of contemporary feeling or message. It.s a moment of redemption and also
possible love, as her childhood sweetheart or friend is seen coming towards her over the ridge. Is
your message about the importance ultimately of being yourself?
Mojgan Khadem:
Definitely it includes that, yes. I think that self-knowledge is essential to a fulfilling kind of
a life, it.s just that there are barriers to that knowledge of self, and perhaps we will never
really know who we are but we can at least be assisted in that search. The secret is love, OK. Let
me tell you. At the end of the day, the secret is that no philosophy and no religion is going to
give us a fulfilling experience of life unless it allows us to be loving towards ourself and
towards others.
Rachael Kohn: So in fact the love of the young man for Jila is the
thing which may indeed overcome the barriers and the racism?
Mojgan Khadem: Yes, the
last speech that Johann gives in the church before he steps out of that church, a church that has
been built by his father and it.s really a tradition that he is expected to follow and be the
leader of in the years to come, he steps out of it after reading straight out of the Bible the
words that say that even if I speak in the tongues of angels and yet I have no charity, I am like a
cymbal.
That word .charity. has recently in the Bible been changed to the word .love., I
guess 100 years ago charity was a word that meant something closer to love, and now that has been
replaced. I chose to go with the word .charity. because that was more authentic to the time that I
was making the film. But basically I think the words of the Bible are telling us that if you stand
up on a soapbox and tell the world in tongues of angels about very meaningful stuff and yet you
have no charity for the people who live around you and you cannot extend a helping hand to somebody
when they.re crying in front of you, then you.re really no more than a cymbal. You kind of are
bereft of meaning; it means nothing; all the words in the world don.t add up to anything unless
there is an action that speaks much louder than words, and that action has got to be filled with
love.
And I chose to call the film Serenades because I think that beyond words,
music has a very deep meaning and is filled with emotion, and it can tell us a lot more than words
ever can, and when Johann as a little boy plays music for little Jila, or when he keeps a promise
and plays music as an adult to Jila, what he.s doing is more than just filling the air with
vibrations of sound, he.s actually telling her something that words cannot tell her. That.s the
beauty of art, of music, and I think it can perhaps play a much bigger role in the make-up of our
emotions.
Rachael Kohn: That sounds very much like a Baha'i
perspective.
Mojgan Khadem: Well the Baha'i perspective tells me that if religion is
going to be the cause of a nightmare in your life, then do without that religion. And I embrace
that.
I am a Baha'i because that is the religion that makes the most sense to me, and if I
find one that.s going to make more sense I will embrace that, but I haven.t found one yet. It is an
all-embracing religion, and it says that I must give more respect to those who uphold a different
religion to me than even I give to my own religion, being a Baha'i. I have to understand that every
religion has been a part of an ongoing developing landscape of spirituality, and I respect every
step of that advancement, be it called Buddhism or Hinduism or Zoroastrian or Muslim or Christian,
or indeed Baha'i. It doesn.t matter what you call it. I think if you find time to live a kind of a
moral standard of your own, be it on an individual basis or on a mass basis, it doesn.t matter; you
finally are a judge of your own kind of beliefs, and it doesn.t matter what you call it, what name
you go by.
Rachael Kohn: Mojgan Khadem, it.s been a delight talking to you and best
of luck on your film, Serenades.
Mojgan Khadem: Thank you so
much.
MUSIC
Rachael Kohn: Now for the other writer of the film, with whom
Mojgan Khadem collaborated for some years. Christine Stevens is an historian whose books, White
Man.s Dreaming and Tin Mosques and Ghantowns, provided her with the rich material on
which she based her story for the film, Serenades.
Father: When I was
your age my father sent me with his best camels to India. He wanted me to learn the ways of the
world. Eight months later I returned to find that my village had been burnt to the ground, and both
my parents were killed. I.ve never told this story, but I.m telling you because I want you to know
that life isn.t about love, it.s about struggle. Love is for books and poetry, not real life. You
marry the Mullah and you have a future without struggle, peaceful, peace of life with a man that
can provide. You will never be hungry or without a roof over your head. You can.t ask for more than
that.
Rachael Kohn: My sense is that people who go to see
Serenades will be most intrigued by the Afghans. Who were they, how many of them came to
Australia?
Christine Stevens: Well there were never any statistics kept on this
particular emigration. These people came, largely contracted labour, generally for a three-year
period. Originally they were brought in to accompany explorers like Burke and Wills for the
prestigious Victorian exploration party, in the race the first across the continent. And the 24
camels were brought in with that consignment and three Afghans. And they were so successful in
their endeavour to cross the country that it was noted by a man called Thomas Elder in the north of
South Australia that these animals would be very good transport animals in the desert areas there
where horses were in fact failing.
Rachael Kohn: So the Afghans kept coming, I
imagine, because this was a successful form of transport?
Christine Stevens: Yes, it
was very successful. In fact at the time that the rescue parties were out looking for the lost
Burke and Wills, Thomas Elder was in McKinlay.s party, he was out in the north of South Australia
with a party looking, and that.s when he first noticed some of these camels that were used, and at
the time the north of South Australia in particular was experiencing a very bad drought. Also
pastoralists had pushed further and further north into what they thought was productive country and
Thomas Elder was one of the big entrepreneurs in the north of South Australia.
So he had
this idea to bring camels in as transport animals to service the interior of the country, and his
was the first experiment that introduced camels as a commercial industry into
Australia.
Rachael Kohn: How wide was the spread of the Afghan
cameleers?
Christine Stevens: It was very wide at its peak, in fact quite quickly
Thomas Elder had a camel stud in the north of South Australia which was highly successful, and his
cameleers and his camel string serviced across into the New South Wales mining centres and further
north to Central Australia. But at one point he decided to move out of the camel business and he
sold quite a few of his camels to his head cameleers, two brothers called Faiz and Taj Mahommed,
and the railhead at that time had moved from Farina which was close to Beltana Station, Thomas
Elder.s station, further north to Maree, and the two brothers took camels that they purchased from
Thomas Elder up to the railhead, which is the furthermost point, and then serviced the pastoralist
and mining industries from there. So that became the earliest and the most enduring Ghan town in
the whole of Australia.
But from Maree, camels and cameleers spread out, they spread then to
Western Australia to the Western Australian goldfields, Coolgardie, then later north into the
Kimberley; they spread from there across into New South Wales towards Bourke, and then they spread
into north-west Queensland towards Cloncurry and then later into Central Australia around Alice
Springs. So they serviced the whole interior over a 50-year period, from about the 1860s to about
1910, .20 really.
Rachael Kohn: Now the Afghans of course were Muslims and they would
have been the first Muslims in Australia in any considerable number. That would have meant they had
to establish their traditions here and build mosques. Are there many left on the
landscape?
Christine Stevens: Yes, there are a few little galvanised iron mosques.
The first mosques that were built were built in the same manner as mosques that were built in rural
Afghanistan, bough and thatched roofed structures, and you can find this same structure in the
desert in the rural parts of Afghanistan up until recently; I don.t know what.s happening now with
the problems in Afghanistan. But then as Afghans began to carry sheets of galvanised iron which was
a common and inexpensive building material for the stations that they were taking cartage, they
soon began to use this material to build both their Ghan town houses and also their
mosques.
Rachael Kohn: One of the most important aspects of Islam is of course the
rituals around eating. Eating meat that is slaughtered according to halal and eating meat that is
not prepared by infidels, or strangers. That would have made living a Muslim life quite difficult
for them.
Christine Stevens: Well yes, it did, particularly in the early days. For
example when the explorers were, there were very few Afghans in the exploration party and food was
being supplied by the cook, and at those times they would never eat with infidels of course and
they would also go and kill their own meat, which they would kill halal style. They would only eat
this food because of their food taboos.
Rachael Kohn: Now of course the Afghans came
here alone, without women; who were destined to become their wives in
Australia?
Christine Stevens: Well they were single men, or they were sometimes
married men, but they didn.t bring women with them, it was not part of the contractual arrangement,
and I think at the time with the racial and religious intolerance within the country, they wouldn.t
have been permitted to bring women with them. They came with the idea that they would earn a
fortune in this new country and they would take the money back and they would be able to pay a
bride price if they were single men, or they would be able to support their families very
comfortably if they were married.
But the reality was that once in Australia, the money
that they were earning, which was in fact lower than the Europeans were charging for cartage,
really didn.t go very far, so they were not able to save much money, they barely got by on a rather
poor lifestyle. And so the reality was many didn.t return to Afghanistan and buy themselves wives
or provide for their families.
They stayed on in the desert here, and in fact they did find
wives amongst marginalised women in Australia, and these women were mainly Aboriginal women who
found themselves on the outskirts of these small towns in the outback, marginalised people
themselves, because they had been moved from their own country by occupation, by Europeans, and
also women who were deserted wives, prostitutes, women who had a husband outside of the confines of
traditional spheres of society.
Rachael Kohn: The film Serenades depicts quite
a tense relationship between the Afghans and the Christians, and I wonder whether in the history of
their being here in that period, were there any really violent stoushes between Afghans and the
European settlers?
Christine Stevens: The violent stoushes were mainly over
contracts, because the Afghan cameleers were carting consignment at much cheaper rates than the
horse and bullock teamsters, and this caused a lot of conflict between the two cultures. Some of
that was violent, some of it was resulted in murder.
Rachael Kohn: Well if there was
conflict between the Afghans and the teamsters, what sort of relationship was there between them
and the missionaries? Because the film, Serenades certainly shows fierce religious tension
there. I mean there was mutual animosity.
Christine Stevens: Interestingly I think at
the time there was a lot of, certainly between European cultures there was a lot of animosity over
the wars that were waged between the first Anglo-Afghan war, and the second Anglo-Afghan war which
were very much in the memory of people at the time, and also the Indian Mutiny, and these were very
vicious conflicts outside of Australia, and some men who had fought in the army had in fact
emigrated to Australia from these particular wars, so there was that kind of
remembrance.
Rachael Kohn: So the Afghans actually had fought against the
British.
Christine Stevens: Yes, in two major wars in Afghanistan, in 1840 and then
again in, I think, about the 1870s, and these were very vicious wars, and in fact they won these
wars, they actually managed to toss the British out of Afghanistan. The British never occupied
Afghanistan even though they tried. Of course that was a sore point for the Empire, and also the
fact that the manner in which the Afghans fought was rather pervert and also very vicious.
Also the Indian Mutiny of 1857 in the north of India was still in the memory of people, and
that provided a lot of ground for racial and religious intolerance in Australia. But amongst the
Lutherans themselves, the Lutherans were quite xenophobic, in fact they were very much against the
British settlers outside as well as Afghans, you know, they saw them all as interfering in their
process of conversion of the Aborigines on the mission station. And also as sources of seduction
for Aboriginal women, I guess they were very much against.
Rachael Kohn: The kind of
religious conflict and tension is really at the centre of the film Serenades, and I wondered
whether that is an issue that interests you in particular.
Christine Stevens: Yes it
does interest me in particular; I think I wrote both Tin Mosques and White Man.s
Dreaming with the intention of quietly and covertly trying to uncover a basic unity of all
humanity within these cultures, and I think that the intention of the film was also to strip away
the cultural clothing and somehow reach in to the university seed that.s within everybody. And Jila
was used as a symbol, as a tool, to take that journey through these cultures and to arrive back at
a place which was right back inside herself, to express her own special essence, which is common to
all.
Rachael Kohn: Christine Stevens, thank you for being on The Spirit of
Things.
Christine Stevens: Thank you.
MUSIC
Rachael Kohn:
Historian Christine Stevens is author of White Man.s Dreaming and Tin Mosques and
Ghantowns, and is the author of the story, Serenades, which is now a major film released
in Australia, starring Alice Haines and Aden Young.
The music in today.s program was from
the soundtrack of the movie, and was composed by Davood Tabrizi.
The Spirit of Things is
produced by me and Geoff Wood, with technical production by Angus Kingston.
Next week, the
central Christian symbol of faith, the Eucharist. Is it just another ritual that excludes some
Christians, or is it the indispensable essence of the Christian message?
Till then, so long
from me, Rachael Kohn.
Guests on this program:
Mojgan Khadem
is an Australian writer and director. She was born in Iran but escaped her homeland at the age
of ten when her mother was in danger of execution by Islamic authorities.
Christine Stevens
is an historian and writer. Her books have charted the lives the Afghan cameleers and Lutheran
missionaries in Central Australia.
Tin Mosques and Ghantowns: A History of Afghan Cameldrivers in Australia
©Copyright 2001, Australian Broadcasting Corporation
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