IN Australia the culture wars continue with the new national school curriculum steeped in political correctness and cancel culture. Even though there is a supposedly conservative Liberal government headed by the world’s only Pentecostal national leader, Scott Morrison, the Left’s long march continues.
The release of the revised curriculum has once again sparked a debate about the study of Judeo-Christianity and Western civilisation in schools. Critics suggest describing the First Fleet and European settlement as ‘genocide’ and focusing too heavily on Indigenous history, culture and spirituality leads to a politically correct, one-sided curriculum.
In particular, the Australian newspaper’s Rebecca Urban argues the curriculum places too much emphasis on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander perspectives to the detriment of Australia’s Christian heritage and the debt owed to Western civilisation.
Urban writes that Australia’s Christian heritage has been erased by the curriculum and that ‘following feedback from an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Advisory Group, it now has elevated importance and has been incorporated directly into several subjects’.
Bella d’Abrera from the Institute of Public Affairs is also critical, arguing that the curriculum ‘would completely remove all references to Christianity, to Ancient Greece, and to the freedoms given to us through the values and institutions of Western civilisation. This is basic knowledge that every Australian school child should be taught’.
The eminent Australian historian Geoffrey Blainey expresses similar concerns when arguing: ‘Genocide is hardly a fair and accurate word. Aboriginal people often suffered from the frontier wars but they suffered even more from the many wars fought by their own “nations”, one against the other, during thousands of years.’
Blainey criticises the new curriculum, designed by the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA), for ignoring the significance of religion, especially Christianity, and the contribution of early Greece and Rome as one of the ‘mainsprings of the civilisation most Australians inherit’.
While it’s true that the revised curriculum nods in the direction of Christianity with the statement: ‘Australia is a secular nation with a culturally diverse, multi-faith society and a Christian heritage’, a closer examination of the history and Civics and Citizenship curriculum documents proves any reference is superficial, misleading and tokenistic.
In the history years 7-10 curriculum, while there are 12 references to Indigenous culture and history there are only four references to Christianity: two in the context of studying the Vikings, one in the context of the Spanish conquest of the Aztecs and one related to its impact, along with Islam, when studying ‘significant events from the ancient world to the modern world’.
The history curriculum includes nothing about the life of Jesus, the impact of the New Testament or the gradual spread of Christianity and its impact of the evolution of Western civilisation including concepts such as the inherent dignity of the person, what constitutes the good life and the nature of good and evil.
At the year 7 level, while studying the ancient world includes ‘Egypt, Greece, Rome, India and China’, students may focus on only one civilisation out of the five as one of the two compulsory studies must include the ‘First Nations Peoples of Australia’.
The Civics and Citizenship curriculum years 7-10 is equally one-sided and biased towards Indigenous history, culture and spirituality. While there is one reference to Australia’s ‘Christian heritage’, the document fails to acknowledge that Christianity underpins the nation’s political and legal systems and that a commitment to social justice and the common good have Judeo-Christian foundations.
While students are told to study the Australian Constitution and our legal system in some detail there is no reference to the fact that the constitution’s preamble includes the phrase ‘Humbly relying on the blessing of Almighty God’ and that parliamentary sessions begin with the Lord’s Prayer.
The Civics and Citizenship curriculum, instead of acknowledging and advocating a strong sense of what it means to be an Australian citizen, embraces a subjective definition characterised by personal identity and choice. A situation where ‘A person’s sense of who they are, and conception and expression of their individuality or association with a group culture or to a state or nation, a region or the world regardless of one’s citizenship status’ takes priority. So much for nation-building and promoting a cohesive and a strong sense of national identity.
That the civics curriculum embraces a politically correct, centre-Left view of education is highlighted by what is included and excluded when asking students to study international agreements. The list includes the Paris Agreement (on climate change), the World Heritage Convention, the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and the Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
At a time when religious freedom is under attack, Christianity is banished from the public square and the state is sponsoring neo-Marxist-inspired gender and sexuality programmes, it’s wrong to ignore international conventions related to religious freedom and the rights parents have as their children’s primary moral guardians and educators.