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Silma Ihram - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Silma Ihram

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Silma Ihram
Born Anne Frances Beaumont
1954
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Residence Lidcombe, New South Wales, Australia
Nationality Australian
Education Meriden School
Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney
James Cook University
University of Sydney
University of New South Wales
University of Western Sydney
Occupation Principal, Education Consultant
Employers Australian International Academy
Known for Pioneer of Muslim education, School founder & Principal, Campaigner for racial tolerance, Political candidate
Term 1983-2006
Political party Unity Party (2002)
Australian Democrats (2007)
Board member of Muslim Women's National Network Australia
Religious beliefs Muslim
Spouse Siddiq Buckley
Baheej Adada
Children 6
Website
www.silmapol.blogspot.com

Silma Ihram (b. Anne Frances Beaumont c. 1954) is an Australian pioneer of Muslim education in the West, founder and former school Principal of the 'Noor Al Houda Islamic College' in Sydney, and a campaigner for racial tolerance.

She was also the Australian Democrats candidate for the seat of Auburn in the 2007 state election, and the Democrats candidate for the Division of Reid in the 2007 federal election.[1]

Ihram is the author of two books, the producer of an educational video in Arabic,[2] and the subject of the documentary, Silma's School. She has been described as "Erin Brockovich in a hijab".[3]

Contents

[edit] Early life

Silma Ihram was born Frances Anne Beaumont,[4] to a middle-class agnostic family,[5] and grew up in the suburb of Balgowlah, on Sydney's Northern Beaches.[4] At the age of five, Ihram was sent to boarding school[4] at Meriden, an Anglican school in Strathfield for her primary education, and the Presbyterian Ladies' College in Croydon for high school, completing her matriculation in 1971.[6] She then completed a Bachelor's degree in Marine Biology at James Cook University.

Despite the Anglican, Presbyterian and Methodist influences from her up-bringing, Ihram ended up with the Baptists who she found to be "very inspirational."[7] She then moved to an Islander church in North Queensland, and studied theology by correspondence from the Baptist sector.[7] Ihram became a born-again Christian in 1968, and participated in missionary work with the Children's Special Service Mission (CSSM) in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[7]

In 1976, during an extended trip to Indonesia, Ihram had a "personal revelation that I had to become a Muslim"[7] and converted to Islam, changing her name to Silma Ihram.[4] She was followed soon after by her Irish Catholic husband.[5] She subsequently returned to university, this time at the University of Sydney, completing a Bachelor's Degree in Indonesian and History. She established the first Muslim Women's Shop and Centre in 1979.[5]

[edit] Career in education

In the early 1980s, Silma Ihram, then the proprietor of the Muslim Women's Shop and Centre, approached her old school, the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney, looking to enrol her daughters. It was reported that her request for the school to allow her daughters to be accepted as Muslims, including the wearing of a Hijab with the uniform, was rejected. Subsequently, and also due in part to the lack of Muslim schools in New South Wales, Ihram looked to establishing her own independent school in South-western Sydney.[8]

In 1983, Ihram and her then husband, Siddiq Buckley, set up the Al-Noori Muslim Primary School at Greenacre,[8] named after a Kuwaiti benefactor who had donated AUD$100,000.[9] The school was forced to move nine times in four years, to such places as a house in Lakemba, a Hall in Canterbury, and a marquee in the Buckley's backyard. According to Ihram, this was due to an inability to "get registration from government without development approval from the council" as "no council would accept us."[8] These problems with council have been a feature of Ihram's schools to this day.[8]

Ihram took her case to the Land and Environment Court, and after two actions to force Bankstown Council to give official approval, a primary school for 105 children was established in 1987. Ihram and her husband faced angry protests due to the schools slogan, Good Muslims make Good Australians.[8]

The school also received little support from Muslim community organisations, making the struggle even more difficult, and creating a credibility problem within the media. Buckley identified the Muslim community itself as a stumbling block, describing it as "internally factionalised, ethnically diverse, politically impotent, intellectually moribund."[10] The school had little access to overseas Islamic charities to provide funding, and subsequently Ihram and her husband struggled to sufficiently equip their school. Assistance came in the form of individual families, with one mother offering to sell her home, rather than see the school close.[10] Despite the set-backs and racism faced by Ihram, enrolments at the school were strong, and Muslim education was given a foothold in Sydney.[8] In 1992, Ihram again returned to university, completing a Master's Degree in Education Administration at the University of New South Wales, in order to aid her running of the school.

Al-Noori received positive attention when it was revealed that Ihram had encouraged her students to lobby for the release of an Australian pilot held hostage in Kuwait, who was the grandson of one of the school's elderly neighbours. According to Mr. Bukley, it was "probably the first time in Australia that Muslims were portrayed as both patriotically Australian and genuinely Muslim", and had a positive impact on the school.[8] This was however not the end of Ihram's problems. She had divorced her husband and opened a second school, the Noor Al Houda Islamic College (meaning "The Guiding Light"), this time for high school students, and a board battle ensued that ended in the Supreme Court of New South Wales.[8]

The second school had been established on a leased site near Bankstown Airport and had attracted approximately 720 students. This site was shortly after found to be contaminated and the school was forced to contribute to the cost of a clean-up.[8] It was soon after discovered that the Federal Airports Corporation, who had leased the land to Noor Al Houda, knew previously of the contamination. Ihram decided to fight against Bankstown Airport in order to save Noor Al Houda, resulting in a five year long Supreme court battle involving 125 court appearances. She re-mortgaged and later sold her home, and accessed her superannuation in order to cover part of the $2million in legal expenses.[11] The school was eventually awarded $1,094,430 in damages by Justice Clifton Hoeben, finding the Federal Airports Corporation, and subsequently the Bankstown Airport Ltd, owed the school a duty of care to disclose a report that the land was contaminated with sewage waste. However, the judge said the $5.1 million Noor Al Houda was originally seeking in damages was "unrealistic" as the cost of moving was only an estimate.[12]

Ihram's campaign to pressure the Government to find a new home for the school became a subject of debate following up to the 2003 state election.[8] In 2002, the NSW Government offered a suitable property at Guildford which was accepted, however a number of local residents complained of having a school there and the decision was revoked.[13] Aided by her second husband Baheej Adada,[4] Ihram managed to find a new, but much smaller site for her school in Strathfield, and at the same time publicly expressed her dissatisfaction with the then Premier of New South Wales, Mr. Bob Carr.[8] The new, and current school campus is a former Christian theological college whose chapel has become a Hindu temple. The temple is dedicated to Sai Baba of Shirdi, an Indian saint who a century ago made his home in a mosque in India and taught harmony between Muslims and Hindus.[3]

In 2006, Ihram's battle to save her school, whilst also ensuring her family's economic survival, became the subject of Silma's school, a documentary by Jane Jeffes,[14] screened at the Sydney Film Festival,[15] and in selected cinemas and on SBS and ABC TV.[4] The film received positive reviews and was greeted with a standing ovation at a screening in Sydney, and a sold-out premiere in London.[3]

Also that year, management of the Noor Al Houda Islamic College was taken over by a large Muslim college, the Australian International Academy from Melbourne, allowing Ihram so step down from her role as Principal in order to spend time with her family and work on other projects.[4] Subsequently, the school is now known as the Australian International Academy, Sydney, and Ihram now works as an Education Consultant for the school.

[edit] Political career

Silma Ihram was elected to the Federal Executive of the Unity Party in 2002, and appeared on the New South Wales State Ballot for the Upper House.[5]

In 2007, Silma Ihram became one of the first two Muslim women to be aligned with a mainstream political party when she ran as a Australian Democrats candidate for the safe Labor seat of Auburn in the 2007 State election.[16] Ihram reportedly decided against running for the seat of Lakemba, an area with a large Muslim population, as she felt she would be labelled a "token Muslim" candidate and wished to not be linked to controversial and much condemned Muslim leader, Sheik Taj El-Din Hilaly, the former Grand Mufti of Australia and New Zealand. As she explained to The Sun-Herald, "Auburn is far more multicultural and less religious and there are more opportunities to help the local community."[16]

Ihram represented the Democrats again in November 2007, this time as a candidate for the Division of Reid in the Australian federal election.[1]

[edit] Today

Silma Ihram is married with six children[15] and is currently researching her Master's degree at the University of Western Sydney, in "Understanding the development of identity in adolescent Muslim Lebanese youth".[2] She is the Vice-President of the Muslim Women's National Network Australia,[17] and remains an Education Consultant for the Australian International Academy, and a consultant in the area of education and Muslim community relations.[2] She frequently partakes in forums and debates regarding issues pertaining to education, racism and Australian Muslims, and also often contributes opinion pieces and interviews with media sources.

Ihram has expressed her ambition to set up an international harmony college, a multi-religion school where the faiths of all students would be respected.[9]

[edit] Awards and committees

In 2002, Silma Ihram was a recipient of the Centenary Medal, and in 2005 was named Muslim Woman of the Year.[15] She was also awarded for her "contributions and efforts in the community", at the 2006 Women of Faith Dinner & Awards, hosted by the Affinity Intercultural Foundation.[18]

Ihram has held a number of executive posts with Muslim organisations in Australia, including Vice-President of the Australian Council for Islamic Education in Schools in 2004,[15] and her current roles as the Vice-President of the Muslim Women's National Network Australia,[17] and Secretary General of the Australian Council for Islamic Education in Schools.[2] She was recently inducted into the Rotary Club of Strathfield.[19]

[edit] Publications

Silma Ihram is the author of two books, Bridges of Light, and Islamic Parenting. She is also the producer of an educational video in Arabic, called Their First Years.[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Candidates for the 2007 Federal Election. NSW Division. Australian Democrats (2005). Retrieved on 2007-10-24.
  2. ^ a b c d About me. Silma. Push-Button Publishing (2007). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  3. ^ a b c "School of thought", TV Guide, The Age, 2006-08-31. Retrieved on 2007-09-26. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "'Justice for all' the principal lesson", Weekend, The Manly Daily, 2006-08-26. Retrieved on 2007-09-26. 
  5. ^ a b c d e Seyfettin Seyit, Kuranda (2005). Annual Report 2005 (PDF). The Forum on Australia's Islamic Relations p.8. FAIR. Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  6. ^ McFarlane, John (1988). "Ex-Students", The Golden Hope: Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney 1888-1988. Croydon, NSW: P.L.C Council, Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney, pp. 206-265. ISBN 0-9597340-1-5. 
  7. ^ a b c d ABC Online Forum. Compass. ABC (2006-09-04). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Morris, Linda. "Islamic pioneer still battles for land, 20 years on", Religion in Schools, The Sydney Morning Herald, 2003-06-24. Retrieved on 2007-09-26. 
  9. ^ a b The complete Hypothetical panel. Bulletin Sunday Hypothetical. NineMSN (2006-04-12). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  10. ^ a b van Driel, Barry (2004). "Educational Choices for Immigrant Muslim Communities: secular or religious?", Confronting Islamophobia In Educational Practice. Stoke on Trent, UK: Trentham Books, pp.131-133. ISBN 1-8585634-0-2. Retrieved on 2007-09-26. 
  11. ^ Silma's School. Films. Smily Documentary Film Distribution Ltd (2007). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  12. ^ Williams, Kylie. "Noor Al Houda Islamic College Gets $1M Over Contaminated Land", News.com.au, 2005-02-25. Retrieved on 2007-09-26. 
  13. ^ Hawat, Dario (2002-02-26). NOUR AL HOUDA Protest Meeting. Islamic Sydney. Muslim Village. Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  14. ^ Silma's School. Real life on film. Australian Centre for the Moving Image (2006). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  15. ^ a b c d CSU debates FAIR treatment of Islam in the media. Religion & Ethics. Charles Sturt University (2007-05-28). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  16. ^ a b Chandab, Taghred. "Muslim women run for Dems, Greens", State Election 2007, The Sun-Herald, 2007-03-04. Retrieved on 2007-09-26. 
  17. ^ a b Program. Empowerment and Inclusion: Australian Cultural and Social Diversity within a Global Context. FECCA Congress 2007 (2007-07-25). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  18. ^ 4th Annual Women of Faith Dinner & Awards. Cultural. Affinity Intercultural Foundation (2006-03-12). Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  19. ^ McDougall, Rod (2007-06-13). The President's View. Rotary Club of Strathfield. Retrieved on 2007-09-26.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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