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ABC Top Stories6/30/2026Politics3 min readAustralia

Usman Khawaja joins campaign against Islamophobia after mother's abuse

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  • Cricketer Usman Khawaja has joined a national campaign to combat Islamophobia in Australia, inspired by his mother's experience of verbal abuse at a Test match.
  • The campaign urges victims to report incidents and bystanders to intervene.

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Why It Matters

Cricketer Usman Khawaja's mother was verbally abused at a Test match, highlighting the growing problem of Islamophobia in Australia. He has joined a campaign to combat this issue.

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The growing problem of Islamophobia hit home to Usman Khawaja a couple of years ago when his mother was verbally abused while she was watching her son play in a Test match in Melbourne.

Wearing a traditional hijab, Fauzia copped abuse from two Australian fans at the 2024 Boxing Day Test match against India at the MCG.

"She had a couple of guys come up to her and start yelling into her ear and she was pretty shocked by the experience," Khawaja said.

"I was playing so I didn't find out until later in the day.

Having retired from international cricket in January after a stellar 15-year career, Khawaja is now using his high profile to fight against Islamophobia across Australia.

He's joined a national campaign to raise awareness of Islamophobic behaviour, urging victims to report incidents.

Khawaja joined Aftab Malik, Special Envoy to Combat Islamophobia, at the campaign's official launch in Melbourne on Monday afternoon.

A video, launched as part of the campaign, calls on bystanders to take action if they witness incidents of anti-Muslim hate.

"When we call it out, when we report it, we make space for systemic change.

"Reporting gives organisations, institutions and the entire community the power and the backing to create a future where acts of Islamophobia can be properly addressed."

Mr Malik described the rise of One Nation, and the anti-Muslim rhetoric of leader Pauline Hanson, as "unhelpful".

"I think the discourse that surrounds these conversations are stereotypical, damaging and dangerous," he said.

"We have an understanding that what is reported is just the tip of the iceberg. We are deeply concerned and something needs to be done."

Khawaja, who wrote the foreword to the campaign's report, said he felt like "an outsider" for much of his time with the Australian cricket team, and faced Islamophobia throughout his career.

"I've experienced Islamophobia since I was a kid in lots of different, varying ways, but I've witnessed it more in recently because I'm more attuned to it and I think it's more prevalent right now," he said.

"There were times when people tried to ostracise me and discriminate against me because of my beliefs in a broader sense."

But Khawaja, 39, said that Muslim women, like his mother, suffered much greater challenges in modern Australian.

"If I walk down the street, I can get away with it. If you look at me, you don't really see too much," he said.

"But women who wear hijabs are targets right now, because they wear their religions on their sleeves. It's very hard for them to walk down the street and blend in.

"I think hate right now is more prevalent that it has been before, not just in terms of Islamophobia, but in general."

After the national launch in Victoria, the campaign will roll out in the other states and territories, with Mr Malik estimating a 740 per cent rise in Islamophobic incidents since the Bondi attacks last December.

"These incidents are becoming increasingly brazen, outlandish and violent," Mr Malik said.

Open Questions

  • What specific actions will the campaign take in other states?
  • How will reporting mechanisms be strengthened?
  • What is the long-term strategy to address systemic change?

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This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

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