Australian Muslim group wants holy holidays realized

From NineMSN/9news

Muslims want Islamic holidays recognised

12:18 AEST Sat Sep 12 2009
Keysar Trad says shop owners should recognise Muslim-orientated public holidays. (AAP)
Keysar Trad says shop owners should recognise Muslim-orientated public holidays. (AAP)

Sep 12, 2009

A leading Muslim spokesman has criticised new NSW laws that enshrine the rights of staff to refuse to work on Christian-orientated public holidays.

Do you agree with the new public holiday laws? See what ninemsn readers had to say.

The state government is banning most shops from opening on Christmas Day, Boxing Day, Easter Sunday and Good Friday unless their owners can prove compelling demand from the local community.

Shops will also only be able to open for half a day on ANZAC day.

The new law prevents shop owners forcing staff to work on those days.

Sydney-based Muslim community spokesman Keysar Trad said workers of all faiths were entitled to a break and called for the two main Muslim public holidays to be recognised as well.

“It does give the impression that we are a solely Christian nation and it raises the issue of other religions too, whether you are Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim,” he told AAP on Saturday.

“I know Muslim workers face problems asking for their public holidays off work at the moment.

“There are only two Muslim public holidays, so it is not a lot to ask.”

He cited the example of Lebanon where Christian and Muslim public holidays are widely celebrated by members of both faiths.

“Productivity in Lebanon has not been hurt by the way they do things. Celebrating other faith’s public holidays, actually, is excellent for community relations.”

Shops in Sydney CBD, Newcastle CBD and in Cabramatta are exempt from the new law, as are small businesses.

NSW Minister for Industrial Relations John Hatzistergos introduced the legislation to Parliament on Friday in a bid to allow shop workers to spend the major Christian public holidays with their families.

A spokesman for Mr Hatzistergos admitted the days involved were Christian-orientated, but said the new law, which is supported by opposition ministers, was not about religion.

“It’s about allowing workers to spend time with their families,” he told AAP.

“It’s not about enshrining something for religious reasons, it’s about protecting workers rights.”

The law has been applauded by unions, some major retailers and veteran groups.

2 Replies to “Australian Muslim group wants holy holidays realized”

  1. Those inbred bedouin savages can have all the mahoundian holidays they want in Opensewerabia, Egypt, Jordan, Somalia, Porkistan, Yemen, etc…. But wait! In those open sewers they wouldn’t be able to laze about all day long and live off the fat welfare checks they get from infidel states, where non-mahoundians work hard to earn a living and pay the taxes that finance their own destruction through the nurturing of these hostile mahoundian invaders, right?