![]() I come from a tradition which says whoever saves one life, it is as if they had saved the world. Katie had been the family housekeeper and as Germany went from bad to worse, she took risks to help get my grandmother and her brother to Switzerland and then to England, and finally to Australia in 1936. It’s because a Catholic woman saved the Jewish family, my family. If you want to know why I have such a deep passion to protect the religious freedoms of other Australians such as my Catholic friends. I didn’t know it as a boy, but I know now that Katie helped get my family out of Germany in 1936. She was so much for another time and place that she made her home here. ![]() She was such a part of our family that she sewed our names on our school uniform. When I visited Katie, we would she would make my brother and I tasty German cakes. Julian Leeser then tells a personal story of a family friend he knew when he was growing up, a woman named Katie Popp (I am unsure of spelling, so will check this): Julian Leeser: ‘A Catholic woman saved the Jewish family, my family’ This one we have a particular need to unanimously oppose and the fact that we will end up dividing on a procedural motion as we’re about to should not be seen to change the unanimity in the need to oppose those symbols. And often some people have tested the water with freedom of speech arguments before it’s landed.Īnd I say this as someone who will go through their entire life without being a victim of racial bigotry that surrounded by neighbours where their experience can be utterly, utterly different.Īnd of all the symbols of bigotry. But as I said, every state parliament now pretty much has been working through and there’s often been a debate before they’ve got there. Those are views that are shared around this room.Īnd so there are particular reasons why no government has ever agreed to a private member’s bill in the form that support here. Words can be bullets, and the horror of that salute is in real terms and an act of violence in itself. When it comes to just straight hatred, symbols can be bullets. They are symbols that are horrific and for all the times that people go to a freedom of speech argument. He mentions the penalties and things and says they are things which need to be checked.īut he says that no one should mistake not moving forward with this debate for the government not acknowledging the issue or standing opposed to the need for action. He says the government is doing work in this area already, but the government won’t be supporting the motion, as no government has ever agreed to a private member’s bill without checking it – going through departmental and cabinet processes. He mentions the tone of the debate, and credits the opposition leader and Julian Leeser for sticking to the cause. Tony Burke is on his feet now, responding for the government. 23.50 GMT Government will not support motion to debate Nazi salute ban in parliament And so for those reasons, the government will not be supporting the suspension that’s before the house. ![]() Nobody should think that because we divide on the procedure, that somehow that creates a divide on the repugnant chi of nazism and the symbols that go with it. It won’t happen.Īnd secondly … if a division is called no one who takes solace in those symbols, should see a division about procedure on the floor of this parliament as giving them some solace of thinking that they have supporters. One, no government ever would have been in a circumstance in where something like this was moved and was in a position to vote for it. But I do want to make the point very clearly, I guess two points. I think I’ve dealt I’ve been dealing with everybody in the way that I’ve turned to speak and I’ve done it very deliberately.Īnd so I make no criticism of the leader of the opposition in bringing this resolution forward. No, no, we all were.Īnd I think I’ve been including everybody in the way that I’ve dealt with a speech. I was horrified to see them appearing in Melbourne. And I was stunned to see them appearing in Melbourne. These symbols have been used for what has become the symbol of the worst of humanity. I would not want anyone, anyone at all, to see the parliament dividing on a vote in a few moments time and see that as evidence of division in the need to oppose the use of these symbols. Tony Burke is trying to make the point that opposing the motion does not mean the government is divided on the issue: If it does, it would show the government on one side and the opposition on the other. The chamber may divide on the motion to suspend standing orders.
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