Australian inquiry opens public hearings into Bondi Beach shooting
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Items on Dec 15, 2025, remaining at the outdoor theatre and the Bondi Pavilion, which was in use at the time of the shooting, in Bondi Beach, Australia.
PHOTO: MATTHEW ABBOTT/NYTIMES
SYDNEY – An inquiry into a shooting that killed 15 people at a Hanukkah festival near Sydney’s Bondi Beach heard on May 4 that Sydney’s Jewish community feared “catastrophe” was coming as anti-Semitic attacks rose.
The federal royal commission – the highest level of government inquiry – was called to probe factors leading to the attack by two gunmen on Jewish families at Australia’s most famous beach on Dec 14.
“The sharp spike of anti-Semitism that we have witnessed in Australia has been mirrored in other Western countries and seems clearly linked to events in the Middle East,” inquiry chief Virginia Bell said in opening remarks.
“It’s important that people understand how quickly those events can prompt ugly displays of hostility towards Jewish Australians simply because they are Jews.”
‘Oldest hatreds’
The inquiry had received thousands of submissions about the impact of “one of society’s oldest hatreds”, said counsel Zelie Hegen, who is assisting the inquiry.
Ms Sheina Gutnick, whose father Reuven Morrison was killed in the Bondi attack, told the inquiry there had been a shift in anti-Semitism since 2023, when the Gaza war began.
“Anti-Semitism was allowed to come into the open,” she said.
Her refugee parents had met at Bondi Beach, a scene of many happy childhood memories for her.
“Now Bondi holds a really, really heavy weight in our community’s heart,” she said.
The inquiry heard from witnesses, some granted pseudonyms because of their fear of reprisals, about the impact on the Jewish community of anti-Semitic chants during a protest against the war in Gaza outside Sydney’s Opera House in October 2023, shortly after the Hamas attack on Israel.
Jewish community groups recorded 2,062 anti-Semitic incidents in 2024, and parents feared sending children to Jewish schools.
‘An un-Australian thing’
That summer saw a string of arson and graffiti attacks against synagogues and Jewish businesses in Sydney and Melbourne.
A woman who works with a Jewish security group recounted having to escort people to safety from a Melbourne synagogue in November 2023 on the anniversary of the Nazi Kristallnacht pogrom as a “mob” of around 30 people dressed in black, their faces masked, appeared.
A Jewish woman whose grandparents were Holocaust survivors, and grew up in Bondi, told the inquiry she was “shocked to see flags being burnt at the Opera House – it was such an un-Australian thing”.
She was “incredibly disappointed that the police hadn’t stepped in before things got as bad as they did”, she said.
In her experience, many Australians she worked with had never previously met a Jewish person, and she asked the community to listen when Jewish people “feel like history is repeating itself”.
‘Patriots’
Mr Alex Ryvchin, chief executive of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry who migrated from Ukraine as a child, said many victims of the Bondi attack were from a tight-knit community of refugees from the Soviet Union.
“They were patriots who loved this country,” he said, recalling several friends who died.
A firebomb attack on Mr Ryvchin’s former family home in January 2025 marked an escalation in anti-Semitic attacks because it targeted a private home, he said.
“We were on a path to catastrophe,” he told the inquiry, detailing death threats he continues to receive.
He sent his children away as he fielded concerned calls from the Australian Prime Minister, the police and the counter-terrorism squad.
“That was January; by December on that same road, 3km down, there was a horrific massacre that has transformed us permanently,” he said.
Sajid Akram and son Naveed are accused of opening fire as Jewish families thronged Bondi Beach for a Hanukkah celebration in December, carrying out Australia’s deadliest mass shooting for 30 years.
Alleged gunman Sajid Akram, 50, was shot and killed by the police during the assault.
His 24-year-old son Naveed, an Australian-born citizen who remains in prison, has been charged over terrorism and 15 murders. AFP


