Growing concern is being voiced across Australia as Muslim communities report a sustained climate of fear, particularly among young Muslim women who increasingly feel unsafe in public spaces. Accounts emerging from within the community point to a pattern of behaviour shaped by caution, avoidance, and constant risk assessment.
One example reflects a broader reality. A young Muslim woman born in Australia has, over recent months, begun calling in sick to avoid travelling to work. She avoids major public areas such as Westfield Bondi Junction and relies on WhatsApp groups where Muslim women share real time warnings about areas perceived as unsafe. This behaviour is not driven by isolated incidents but by a persistent sense of insecurity.
National Report Confirms Widespread Anxiety
The Australian Human Rights Commission recently published a report titled The Struggle to Be Seen, the Power in Being Heard, documenting testimonies from Jewish, Muslim, Palestinian, Arab, and Israeli Australians. The report identifies a shared condition across communities: fear that has become embedded in daily life rather than reacting to singular events.
For Muslim Australians in particular, this fear is not episodic. It is continuous, shaping everyday decisions, movements, and interactions.
From Post 9 11 Suspicion to Normalised Islamophobia
The experience of Muslim migrants in Australia has evolved significantly over the past two decades. For those who arrived prior to the events of September 11, 2001, early forms of Islamophobia were often viewed as reactive and temporary.
Today, that environment has shifted. For a younger generation born and raised in Australia, suspicion is no longer a reaction but a constant backdrop. Muslim women who choose to wear the hijab report heightened visibility and exposure, with decisions about travel, work, and social engagement increasingly influenced by perceived risk.
The report describes this dynamic as a form of racism that homogenises communities, diminishes identity, and isolates individuals. It identifies a rising trend in racist incidents, not as anomalies, but as part of an escalating pattern.
The Normalisation of Exclusion
This environment reflects a gradual normalisation of xenophobia. It is not always expressed through overt hostility, but through anticipatory behaviour that shapes how individuals navigate public life.
Muslim Australians report that acts of violence involving individuals who claim affiliation with Islam often trigger broad scrutiny directed at the entire community. This collective attribution stands in contrast to how other forms of violence are treated.
For example, following the Christchurch mosque shootings, perpetrated by a white Australian, there was no widespread demand for collective accountability from white Australians. Similarly, domestic violence incidents, despite their scale, are addressed at an individual level rather than attributed to national identity.
Double Standards and Collective Blame
The disparity in response raises critical questions about how accountability is assigned. Muslim communities continue to face collective suspicion, with individuals expected to justify or distance themselves from actions they have no connection to.
This pattern was evident following the Lindt Cafe siege, when Muslim Australians anticipated backlash. Reports at the time included incidents of verbal abuse directed at individuals who were born and raised in Australia, reinforcing a perception of conditional belonging.
Race Discrimination Commissioner Giridharan Sivaraman described the impact of such incidents as cumulative, where each act of racism reinforces the perception that institutional safeguards are failing to protect affected communities.
Policy Inaction and Political Rhetoric
Despite the findings, the Commission’s National Anti Racism Framework, released 18 months ago and containing 63 recommendations, has yet to receive formal commitment from the federal government.
At the same time, political rhetoric continues to shape public perception. Statements from figures such as Pauline Hanson, Barnaby Joyce, and Bob Katter have been cited as contributing to a narrative that frames multiculturalism as a problem rather than a societal strength.
Such discourse, when normalised, shifts public attitudes and reinforces exclusionary thinking, gradually embedding suspicion into the social fabric.
A Question of Belonging
The broader consequence is a weakening of social cohesion, where belonging becomes conditional and tied to perception rather than citizenship.
For many Muslim Australians, particularly those born in the country, the repeated suggestion to “go back” raises a fundamental question of identity and place. In a nation they have never left, the notion of belonging is increasingly challenged by narratives that position them as outsiders.





