dictation

The dictation test was a long standing device to exclude unwanted immigrants from Australia.  If you failed the test (which could be given in any European language) then you became a “prohibited immigrant” and were subject to deportation.

In 1934, the government of the day was attempting to exclude Egon Kisch (an activist on a world wide anti-Hitler campaign) from Australian and he was requested to do the test. Unfortunately, Mr Kisch was fluent in so many European languages that the immigration officer resorted to administering the test in Scottish Gaelic. It became apparent in the subsequent High Court case (R v Wilson; Ex parte Kisch (1934) 52 CLR 234) that the immigration officer himself was not familiar with Scottish Gaelic. His translation of “lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil” became  “as well as we could benefit and if we let her scatter free to the bad”.

Mr Kisch successfully obtained a declaration that the decision to deport him was unlawful on the basis that Scottish Gaelic was not a European language for the purpose of the legislation but was only a rarely used dialect. The decision caused an uproar in the Australian Scottish Community who were (rightfully) incensed at the downgrading of their language to “dialect”. The popular press apparently ran hot over the issue.

This story is told more fully in Crock and Berg “Immigration, Refugees and Forced Migration“, Federation Press 2011 and for the supersized version see: Zogbaum “Kisch in Australia: The Untold Story” Melbourne: Scribe 2004.

Creative commons attribution for the photograph.

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