SearchUserNavigationUsing Multicultural Media Exchange ContentOriginal content on this site is licensed under Creative Commons. You may copy, distribute verbatim copies and licence this content to others for non-commercial gain only, as long as you attribute Multicultural Media Exchange.
|
To be or not to beBy Nyadol Nyuon
Most recently the question has expanded to become “to be or not to be an Australian” but I have come to realise that, because the answer does not entirely fall to me, there are limits on how I can respond to this question. I was born in Itang refugee camp in Ethiopia because my county of origin, Sudan, was in the middle of a civil war then in n 1991, another war broke out in my country of refuge and my family fled Ethiopia to Kenya where we settled in Kakuma Refugee camp. In 2005, our resettlement application was approved by the Australian Government and I arrived in this country on March 16, 2005. I am Sudanese in origin, an Ethiopian by birth, a Kenyan by naturalisation and I am becoming Australian. On top and above of all these identities, I am simply like any other young person trying to establish my own understanding of the meaning of life and my surroundings. No man is an island. We all need a society as a point of reference, to validate the ‘meanings’ we create in life, to give us a sense of belonging, to know who we are and to regulate who we are. Through the meaning of “we” sometimes we can define the “I”. I believe that, by balancing being part of a collective with our individuality, we can sustain a healthy state of mind and body but the question remains; to which society do I refer - Sudanese, Ethiopian, Kenyan or the Australian?
Is there such an identity as a Sudanese-Ethiopian-Kenyan-Australian? Or perhaps there is a less complex identity of a Sudanese-Australian? If so, what does that constitute? What part of being Sudanese must I let go to be an Australian? What part of being Australian can I choose not to adapt so I remain Sudanese? Is being a Sudanese Australian a “compromise” identity? And if this is the case, what I am to compromise and what should not be compromised? Sometimes I wonder if these two identities (as well as the others) are so narrowly and politically defined that I can not comfortably fall into either of the two categorizations . Multiculturalism should solve my problem but it does not. Multiculturalism has always adopted a different shape and form depending on the Australian political landscape. So too has the term “integration”. When it was defined by the previous government, integration sounded like a down graded form of assimilation, evidenced by the numerous debates about “Australian values and an Australian identity."
The debates seem to foster a certain kind of identity in a so-called multicultural society with the citizenship test as a testimony but they leave me more confused than enlightened. Conversely being Sudanese is a daily struggle as some of the “things” I do or say are sometimes considered too Australian to be Sudanese. So in answer to the question, to be or not to be, my resolution is that I am as much Australian as I am Sudanese. I don’t have to sacrifice one to be the other. Becoming an Australian is an expansion of what or who I consider myself to be. To become an Australian is to learn a new way of understanding and analyse the world from a different perspective.
I am not blind to how this change will come about and how harmoniously it will occur, but I recognise that we need more time to exaggerate our differences than we need to emphasise our similarities. So maybe to be an Australian, a Sudanese or a Sudanese-Australian is above all to be a virtuous human being, who recognises the diversity in the world; some one who is willing to rid themselves of ignorance and accept the learning opportunities offered by different cultures.
Australia has provided me with more than a state while Sudan will always remain a part of me. These qualities speak to my sense of self, which is still growing and might not stop growing because I will not restrict myself to concrete definitions in a changing world.
|
New Short Courses - build your media skillsOur short courses are practical and fun. The'll help you to develop ideas, get your message into the media and present like a pro.
|