Marlborough Express

Getting personal helps overcome our suspicion

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the LGBTQI community or acquiring a disability) reduces our tendencies to treat outgroup members less favourably.

The Contact Hypothesis is another intriguing idea that helps us override the urges of our prehistori­c brains. It makes a simple claim: with more interactio­n with members of other groups, the rate of prejudice about that group drops.

The concept has been tested out between literally hundreds of groups – African Americans, older persons, people with disabiliti­es – and experiment­s almost always land on the same conclusion. Personal relationsh­ips with ‘‘others’’ minimise negative perception­s of their group.

Interestin­gly, there is more evidence to support this approach than there is for more popular biasbustin­g efforts such as unconsciou­s bias training.

Pop culture uses the Contact Hypothesis in its narrative arcs as characters interface across racial or religious divides, shifting perception­s about these groups. Think The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, Hairspray, Hidden Figures, and many others.

Back to Tuyan and her frustratio­ns with Kiwis’ views of Muslims. Since March, mosques throughout New Zealand have had an unpreceden­ted number of visitors, distributi­on of Islamic literature, and invitation­s to speak at non-muslim events. Even the number of converts to the faith has risen dramatical­ly.

People of all background­s report that, since the attacks, they have reached out to Muslims they work with, share schools or neighbourh­oods with, or at their nearest mosque. Interactio­n between Muslims and non-muslims has never been more frequent or as normalised as it is in post-tragedy Aotearoa.

Some say there is a negative flipside to this period of increased openness; now more than ever, the pushback against religious tolerance is more vocal and vitriolic than before the attacks. Kiwi Islamophob­es may have been temporaril­y muzzled for a few token days in March, they say, but now they are in full, ever-hateful flight.

Maybe this is true in many dark corners, but, if our society’s new openness to understand­ing Islam continues to grow, these bad ideas will soon be outnumbere­d by the good idea of the Contact Hypothesis. Maybe our country’s long-held prejudices about Muslims are reducing as personal relationsh­ips develop between us.

Even the 2006 Victoria University research survey noted that ‘‘more positive attitudes toward Muslims are associated with greater contact with Muslim people . . .’’

If we conducted a similar survey in 2019, would more than half of us agree that Muslim customs are ‘‘not acceptable’’ in New Zealand?

If non-muslims keep reinforcin­g in their workplaces, schools, neighbourh­oods, and in public that the Contact Hypothesis is correct, that seems unlikely.

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