Sunday, December 22, 2024

Fatima Payman reflected Labor’s hopes for the future. How did it lose her?

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“Little drops make a mighty ocean.”

It was a saying Abdul Wakil would often repeat to his eldest daughter Fatima.

For Abdul, it was more than metaphor. In 1999, having fled the Taliban, he crossed the Indian Ocean in a small boat bound for Australia.

There he would work for four years before Fatima, her mother Shogufa and her siblings could join him to start a new life in suburban Perth.

Two decades later, his 27-year-old daughter was overcome with emotion as she paid tribute to her father in her first Senate speech.

She quoted from a poem he would often read her, spoken first in Dari then in English:

Human beings are members of a whole /In creation of one essence and soul / If one member is afflicted with pain / Other members uneasy will remain

In the months following the Hamas terror attack of October 7, as Israeli forces killed tens of thousands of civilians in Gaza, Senator Payman became increasingly uneasy.

On Thursday, that culminated in her decision to quit the Labor party after days of mutual animosity, accusations and backgrounding over her decision to vote against the party on a Greens Senate motion calling for Palestinian recognition.

Fatima Payman paid tribute to her late father in her first speech in 2022.(ABC News: Ian Cutmore)

A gathering swell

Senator Payman has insisted that decision was made only seconds before she walked across the chamber to cast her vote.

But even if the vote was not premeditated, her discomfort had been building for months.

By early 2024, she was acutely aware of anger in the Muslim community over her government’s response to the conflict, when she struggled to line up community members willing to attend Iftar dinners with the prime minister.

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