For Australia’s Jews, Bondi shooting feels tragically inevitable
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A police officer ushering pedestrians across a street near the scene of the shooting incident on Dec 14.
PHOTO: EPA
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SYDNEY - Days after Hamas attacked Israel in 2023, killing some 1,200 people and sparking the war in Gaza, an inverted red triangle was spray-painted on the front of a Jewish bakery in Sydney, the first of a string of antisemitic incidents in Australia
Sixteen months and thousands of arson, firebombing, graffiti and hate-speech incidents later, the head of the nation's main intelligence agency declared that antisemitism was his No. 1 priority in terms of threat to life.
The Dec 14 shooting attack
"This is the worst fears of the Jewish community," Mr Alex Ryvchin, co-CEO of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, told Sky News. "It's been bubbling under the surface for a long time, and now it's actually happened."
Australia's Jewish diaspora is small but deeply embedded in the wider community, with about 150,000 people who identify as Jewish in the country of 27 million. About one-third of them are estimated to live in Sydney's eastern suburbs, including Bondi.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, calling the Hanukkah shootings a devastating terrorist attack targeting Jewish people, said his government would "dedicate every resource to making sure you are safe and protected".
Amid constant reports of Jewish parents afraid to take their children to daycare and Jewish schools hiring extra security, the government in 2024 appointed its first special envoy to combat antisemitism.
"Being Jewish, it's been a very challenging few years," said Terry, who gave only his first name and was at a nearby Hanukkah event that was put into lockdown.
"Maybe we need to move to Israel one day. The irony is that that's looking like the only real safe place in the world we can be as Jews."
Mr Ryvchin's organisation logged some 1,600 anti-Jewish incidents in the year to Sept 30, about three times the number in any year before the Hamas attack and Israel's response, according to a report it published earlier in December.
One of those incidents was antisemitic graffiti on Mr Ryvchin's former home near Bondi Beach in January, the report said.
Other incidents included a childcare centre firebombed and emblazoned with antisemitic graffiti, also in Sydney's eastern suburbs, and two public hospital nurses who were sacked after being captured on a social media video-chat platform saying they would turn away Israeli patients.
"The inevitable has happened now," said Rabbi Levi Wolff of Central Sydney Synagogue, speaking in Bondi. As a Jew in Australia, he added, "You're always looking behind you." REUTERS

