Pastors Who
'Vilified' Islam Would Choose Jail Over Apology
By Patrick Goodenough
CNSNews.com International Editor
June 22, 2005
(CNSNews.com) - Two evangelical pastors in Australia convicted of
vilifying Muslims say they will go to prison rather than obey a judge's order
to apologize.
A tribunal judge in the state of
They would also have to promise never to repeat them -- or any other comments
which would have the "same or similar effect" -- anywhere in
Failure to do so would make it "necessary for further orders to be made,"
said Judge Michael Higgins of the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal
(VCAT), a body that operates like a normal court of law.
In a landmark ruling last December, Higgins found that the two had vilified
Muslims at a seminar on Islam and in articles published in a newsletter and on
the Internet.
He said Scot, a Pakistan-born pastor who addressed the seminar, had done so
"in a way which is essentially hostile, demeaning and derogatory of all
Muslim people, their god, Allah, the prophet Mohammed and in general Muslim
religious beliefs and practices."
The offending statement included the view that the Koran promotes violence and
killing; that Muslims lie; and that Muslims intend to take over
Higgins also found that an article by Nalliah in a Catch the Fire newsletter
contained statements "likely to incite a feeling of hatred towards
Muslims," including the claim that Muslim refugees were being granted
visas to
Nalliah and Scot had argued that the intention was to help Christians
understand Islam, based on references to the Koran and other Islamic texts.
The case against the pastors resulted from a complaint by the state's Islamic
Council. It was the first of its kind to be brought under
Shortly after the order was handed down at the VCAT chambers in
"We have from the beginning said this law is a foul law. And it's under
the law that the judge has brought the judgment," he said. "Complying
with the judge's judgment makes it clear that we respect the law - but we don't
respect the law."
Asked whether he really expected that such a stand could land them in prison,
Nalliah said they were taking the position because they wanted to see the law
abolished.
"But the repercussions, as I understand, could result in the judge saying
'you'll have to go into jail for a season because you rejected my judgment.' We
are willing to face it if that's the case."
The two have appealed to the Supreme Court.
'Throttling free speech'
The case, which has taken more than 20 months to finalize, has drawn
international attention.
At one point in 2003 the Australian Embassy in
In
Although churches in
Bill Muehlenberg of the Australian Family Association, a leading campaigner
against the law, called Wednesday's ruling a sinister turn in a supposedly
democratic nation.
"It may not be people bursting into our churches with guns loaded, but the
effect is the same," he said in reaction to Higgins' order.
"If a secular judge does not like what he hears, he can not only throttle
free speech, but can hinder the public proclamation of the gospel as
well."
Muehlenberg said Jesus had warned that his followers would be dragged before
courts -- "but here we see it being done in the name of civilized virtues:
tolerance and the like."
"To offer a Christian critique of other religious views and truth claims
can now result in jail sentences. This is a likely outcome as the two pastors
will not, on principle, make public apologies."
He predicted that the case would separate those who were serious about their
faith from those who were not.
"This is real wheat versus the chaff type-stuff: who will stand up and be
counted, and who will not?"
Jenny Stokes of Salt Shakers, a Christian ethical action group, said from
"The prohibition on speaking or conduct that would have the 'same or
similar effect' to the statements found by Judge Higgins to have breached the
act and vilified Muslims is very far-reaching -- especially since many of those
statements are from the Koran itself," she said.
'Subjective'
The Nalliah-Scot case is not the only one to have highlighted difficulties with
the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act.
A convicted pedophile and self-described "witch" recently brought a
case against prison authorities and the Salvation Army, complaining that a
Christian course being offered to inmates at his penitentiary had vilified him
by carrying derogatory references to witchcraft. The complaint is pending.
Earlier, another "witch" accused a Christian city councilor of
vilifying her in a public statement he released voicing concern about satanist
activity. The case ended up before the VCAT, but ended with a settlement that
required the councilor to apologize publicly.
In a boost for those campaigning against the Victorian law, the premier of the
neighboring state of New South Wales (NSW) - which is also under a Labor
government - spoke out Monday against a lawmaker's attempt to pass similar
legislation in NSW.
"Religious vilification laws are difficult because ... determining what is
or is not a religious belief is difficult," Premier Bob Carr told state
parliament. "It is subjective."
"Religious vilification laws can undermine the very freedom they seek to
protect -- freedom of thought, conscience and belief," he said.
In a separate move, a federal lawmaker Monday introduced a private member's
bill in
Most opponents of the laws say that while they are well-intended, they are also
superfluous as existing defamation and racial discrimination laws provide
adequate protection.
Pointing to the Nalliah-Scot case outcome, Muehlenberg has also argued that
secular judges are not competent to rule in complex theological disputes.