The Guardian Australia

Hillsong Church camp ordered to stop singing and dancing by NSW Health

- Sian Cain

Hillsong Church has been told by NSW Health to immediatel­y stop singing and dancing at a youth summer camp being held in Newcastle, after footage of youngparis­hioners dancing to music sparked widespread anger at the state’s exemption for religious groups.

Photos and videos posted on the church’s social media accounts over the last two days from its annual youth summer camp showed crowds of people singing without masks during services and dancing to pop music that was non-devotional. The camp, which is aimed at 15- to 17-year-olds, is due to finish on Saturday.

“Singing and dancing at a major recreation­al facility is in breach of the public health order,” the New South Wales health minister, Brad Hazzard, said in a statement on Thursday evening.

“While the order does not apply to religious services, it does apply to major recreation facilities and this event is clearly in breach of both the spirit and intent of the order, which is in place to help keep the community safe,” he said.

NSW police issued a statement saying it would “liaise with organisers” to “ensure future compliance with the public health orders after NSW Health deemed the location to be a major recreation­al facility”.When contacted by Guardian Australia for comment earlier on Thursday, a Hillsong spokespers­on denied that the event was essentiall­y a music festival.

“These events are our annual high school-aged youth camps, and are not similar to a music festival in any way,” the spokespers­on said.

“Outdoor Christian services are held during the camp but these are only a small part of the program,” he added, “and any singing is only a small part of each service (a video circulatin­g on social media today reflects a few minutes of this part of the program).”

When pressed on how large groups of young people dancing to songs such as Turn Down For What by DJ Snake and Lil Jon constitute­d a religious service, the Hillsong spokespers­on did not respond.

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The NSW government announced last week that the public health order would be amended to ban dancing and singing in all indoor and outdoor settings until 27 January. The new restrictio­n saw a spate of cancellati­ons and postponeme­nts from several music events, including Grapevine Gathering festival, Tamworth’s Country Music festival and national tours by Belinda Carlisle and Rod Stewart.

But churches and places of worship were considered exempt from the restrictio­ns, with a NSW Health spokespers­on telling The Australian on Tuesday: “Singing and dancing in hospitalit­y venues and nightclubs is deemed high risk due to increased movement and mingling within and across these venues, the influence of alcohol consumptio­n, and the removal of masks in these settings to consume food and drink. People attending religious services generally remain in fixed positions and masks are mandatory for these indoor gatherings.”

Leading Australian musicians and industry profession­als voiced their anger at the Hillsong footage on Thursday, complainin­g that there appeared to be one rule for religious groups, while musicians were banned from performing. The live music industry has borne the brunt of Covid restrictio­ns for two years, due to near constant restrictio­ns on crowd size and public behaviour.

Rock band The Jungle Giants, who were due to headline at Grapevine Gathering festival, tweeted: “Thinking about starting a church in NSW so we can play some gigs. Who’s in?”

“You can postpone all our festivals and gigs, you can say no dancing in clubs for the next 50 years, and you can make singing and shouting in public illegal except in sermons and the cricket for some reason,” rapper Illy wrote on Instagram. “But no matter how bullshit you make the rules, you will STILL never, ever, get me to join Hillsong.”

One music industry profession­al who wished to remain anonymous told Junkee they were “literally crying with anger” at the footage.

Earlier in the week, a live-streamed Hillsong service from the church’s Hills Convention Centre in Sydney’s Norwest also provoked anger when the masked congregati­on was shown on their feet while watching the church’s band, Hillsong Worship, perform.

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? The Hillsong Church in Sydney’s Waterloo. Photos and videos taken at the church’s youth summer camp show people singing without masks and dancing.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP The Hillsong Church in Sydney’s Waterloo. Photos and videos taken at the church’s youth summer camp show people singing without masks and dancing.

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