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Mauritian Australians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mauritian Australians
Total population
60,000 estimate as of 2017 (by birth and ancestry)[1][2]
Regions with significant populations
Mauritius-born/ ancestry people by state or territory
Victoria32,000[1]
New South Wales12,260[1]
Western Australia11,200[3]
Queensland3,678[3]
Languages
English·Mauritian·French
Religion
Christianity·Hinduism·Islam·Other
Related ethnic groups
African Australians

Mauritian AustraliansareAustraliansofMauritiandescent, or who were born inMauritius.

The Census in 2011 recorded 23 280 Mauritius-born people in Australia, an increase of 28.1 percent from the 2006 Census.

The 2011 distribution by state and territory showed Victoria had the largest number with 11 600 followed by New South Wales (5752), Western Australia (3932) and Queensland (1476).[4]

Mauritians are a rapidly growing migrant group having increased steadily over the past 30 years.[citation needed]

History

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Based on the trading relationship betweenMauritiusand Australia which was established in 1803, the firstMauritianmigrants arrived in Australia before the 1901federationasconvicts,fossickersduring thegold rush,orsugar menwho were skilled sugarcane workers who helped to developQueensland'ssugar industry.[5]

Right afterWorld War IIthe migration of Mauritians to Australia resumed, but was restricted to the privileged minority of whiteFranco-Mauritiansdue to theWhite Australia policywhich prevailed until 1973. Especially in the years leading to the 1968Independence of Mauritiusthere was a significant increase in the number ofFranco-Mauritians,Mulatto,andMauritian Creoleswho migrated permanently to Australia as a result of the anti-Hindu hegemony fear campaign which was financed by the whiteFranco-Mauritianowners of sugar estates and implemented byGaetan Duval'sParti Mauricien Social Démocrateand the local press. Indeed a climate of fear and uncertainty resulted from the fear campaign which resulted in lynching, murders and racial riots which broke out in1965,1967,and1968.[6][7][8]

Cultural background

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As Mauritius is a country with amulticulturalandmultiethnic society,Mauritians have different and diverse ethnic backgrounds. However, in the 2011 Census most Mauritius-born people living in Australia reported being of Mauritian descent (13,651), followed by those of French (4,536) andChinesedescent (2,057).[citation needed]

Base on ethnic lines,Creole Mauritians(Black and mixed-race) represent 50% of the community in Australia, this group were largest numbers leaving Mauritius after independence from colonial rule (Britain, and previously, France) in 1968.Chinese-Mauritiansmake up 7%, arriving mostly during the 80s and 90s, those ofIndianancestry are 20-25% and Creoles of African ancestry 20-25%. Most of the Afro-Mauritians and Indians have arrived after the 2000s, and are the fastest growing part of the community. Mauritian-Australians have a growing presence in Australian popular culture, including in music, literature, and television.[9]Aisha inThe Slapis a notable example, identified in the TV series adaptation as 'Mauritian-Australian'.[10]Havana Brownis a significant Australian musician of Mauritian background.

Language

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The main languages spoken by Mauritius-born people in Australia were French (12,545),English(5,665) andMauritian(2,654).[2]Note that Australia has a large French-speaking Mauritian community in relation to percentage of the overall Mauritian community, they represent 1.4% of the Mauritian community, although numbers would be much higher, but most of the second generation speak English. The French speakers using the language as mother tongue represent the whiteFranco-Mauritians,Mulattosandgens de couleur(mixed-race Creoles) ethnic groups, making up at least 50% of the Mauritian community in Australia. In comparison, in Mauritius 4.1% of the population speaks French as a first language (mother tongue) with 68.6% using French as a second language making a total of 72.7%[11]French speakers.

Notable people

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abc"Home".amasydney.net.
  2. ^ab"The Mauritius-born Community: Historical Background".Australian Government, Department of Immigration and Border Protection (2011 census).19 November 2013. Archived fromthe originalon 13 February 2014.Retrieved23 January2014.
  3. ^ab"Cultural Atlas — Mauritian Culture - Mauritians in Australia".Archived fromthe originalon 6 July 2018.Retrieved6 July2018.
  4. ^"Australian Government -Department of Immigration and Citizenship -Community Information Summary 2014"(PDF).
  5. ^Scroope, Chara."Mauritians in Australia".www.sbs.com.au.Special Broadcasting Service (SBS).Retrieved9 August2017.
  6. ^"Community Information Summary: Mauritius-born"(PDF).Australian Government Department of Immigration and Citizenship.February 2014. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 23 October 2016.Retrieved23 October2016.
  7. ^"Publication: Eric Bahloo, l'affaire Azor Adelaïde".Le Mauricien.Retrieved20 November2011.
  8. ^Scroope, Chara."Mauritians in Australia".www.sbs.com.au.Special Broadcasting Service (SBS).Retrieved9 August2017.
  9. ^Cormack, Bridget (17 September 2011)."A real actor".The Australian.Retrieved23 October2016.
  10. ^"Q & A with Christos Tsiolkas about the" The Slap "television series".Meanjin.Archived fromthe originalon 4 October 2013.
  11. ^Collectif (22 March 2007).La francophonie dans le monde 2006-2007(édition 2006-2007 ed.). Paris: Nathan.ISBN9782098821774.