After Australia’s Hanukkah massacre, critics say appeasing extremists after Oct 7 fueled rising antisemitism
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On Sunday, a tragic terrorist attack shook Sydney as Australian Jews gathered to celebrate Hanukkah. This violent incident has been a long-standing fear for the country’s small yet significant Jewish community, especially after a surge in antisemitic occurrences following the horrific massacre by Hamas in Israel on October 7, 2023.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese swiftly condemned the attack, describing it as “a targeted assault on Jewish Australians on the first day of Hanukkah.” However, critics argue that his Labor government has not adequately addressed the growing wave of antisemitic acts sweeping across the nation.

Avi Yemini from Rebel News Australia has been actively chronicling the attacks against the Jewish community. He told Fox News Digital that mere days after the October 7th Hamas attack, “groups of Islamic extremists were already brazenly searching for Jews in Australia, chanting ‘Where’s the Jews’ outside the Sydney Opera House.” Yemini added that since then, synagogues and childcare centers have faced firebombing, while repeated warnings have been ignored. He expressed concern that without significant government intervention, the horrific attack in Bondi was sadly foreseeable and unlikely to be the last.

Antisemitic graffiti in a Jewish area in Melbourne, Australia.

A photograph depicting antisemitic graffiti in a Jewish neighborhood in Melbourne underscores the gravity of the situation, as noted by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry.

Yemini further commented, “The Australian Labor government has hesitated to take firm action, partly due to its political dependence on votes from the Islamic community. Consequently, many Australian Jews are now confronting the harsh reality that our country may no longer be as secure for us as it once was. I believe this will lead many to seriously consider relocating to Israel.”

Anthony Albanese in Melbourne, Australia.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, center, gestures as he pushes his way past a crowd after visiting the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne, Australia, Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024. (Joel Carrett/AAP Image via AP)

Adding to the anger, Australia’s Labor Prime Minister Anthony Albanese faced criticism for failing to note in an earlier statement posted on X that the deadly attack was directed at Jewish Australians.

Following the attack, a reporter confronted Albanese with concerns about his government’s response to antisemitism, citing his government’s recognition of a Palestinian state, Labor ministers attacking the Israeli government and refusing to visit the sites of the Oct. 7 massacres, and the simultaneous appointment of special envoys for Islamophobia and antisemitism. The reporter asked Albanese whether his government had taken antisemitism seriously.

Adass Israel Synagogue on December 6, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia.

Members of the Synagogue recover items from the Adass Israel Synagogue on Dec. 6, 2024 in Melbourne, Australia. An arson attack on the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne forced congregants to flee as flames engulfed the building early on Friday morning. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese condemned the incident as an antisemitic act, emphasizing that such violence at a place of worship is unacceptable in Australia. (Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images)

“Yes, we have taken it seriously,” Albanese replied. “And we’ve continued to act. We’ve continued to work with Jewish community leaders. We’ve continued to take all the advice from the security agencies to put in place special measures, and we will continue to do so.”

Albanese’s press office did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment about frustrations regarding the prime minister’s response to the mass shooting attack.

Australia antisemitism

An anti-Israel  protestor’s high-vis jacket during a march against the Jewish state by the Sydney Harbor Bridge in Australia. Aug. 2025. (Ayush Kumar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

The Executive Council of Australian Jewry (ECAJ) recently documented 1,654 anti-Jewish incidents across Australia between 1 Oct, 2024 and 30 Sept. 2025, “in addition to 2,062 incidents nationwide the year before.” 

It also noted, “antisemitic incidents in Australia remain at historically high levels, at almost five times the average annual number before Oct. 7, 2023. . . . While there has been a marginal reduction from last year’s all-time high, the most serious categories of incidents, including arson attacks against synagogues, pre‑schools and other Jewish institutions, are higher than in any previous year on record.”

Some of the more shocking incidents to hit Australia’s Jewish community since Oct. 7, 2023, up until Sunday’s terror attack include:

Melbourne

Masked individuals setting a fire in Ripponlea’s Adass Israel Synagogue while congregants said morning prayers. The fire caused widespread damage and injured one worshipper. 

Sydney:

Sydney’s Allawah Synagogue was tagged with swastika graffiti. The following day, the Newtown Synagogue, also in Sydney, was similarly defaced. The week prior, a car in Sydney had been spray-painted with an antisemitic phrase.

Major property damage was inflicted on a childcare center near a Jewish school and synagogue in Sydney during an arson attack. Antisemitic graffiti was found inside.

A car was set on fire in a Jewish community in Sydney, and as many as seven homes in the area were vandalized with antisemitic graffiti.

Two healthcare workers in Sydney speaking on the social platform Chatrouletka with an Israeli man said that they would refuse treatment to Israeli patients and had previously killed Israeli patients.

Israeli restaurant attacked in Melbourne.

Police escort anti-Israeli protesters outside an Israeli restaurant Miznon on Hardware Lane in Melbourne, Friday, July 4, 2025. Families were terrified as one of Australia’s oldest synagogues was targeted by arsonists and protesters shouted chants outside an Israeli restaurant.  (AAP Image/Josh Stanyer/ via Reuters)

Gideon Sa’ar, the foreign minister of Israel, expressed his sorrow to his Australian counterpart Penny Wong by phone. On X on Sunday, Sa’ar said that he told Australia’s foreign minister that “security for the Jewish community in Australia will be achieved only through a real change in the public atmosphere. Calls such as ‘Globalize the Intifada,’ ‘From the River to the Sea Palestine Will be Free,’ and ‘Death to the IDF’ are not legitimate, are not part of freedom of speech, and inevitably lead to what we witnessed today. The Australian government must take strong action against the use of these antisemitic calls.”

Populist Australian Sen. Pauline Hanson said on X that Albanese “never heeded the warning signs, including the weekly antisemitic protests across our nation, hate speech from certain religious clerics, our obnoxious universities and probable terrorist alert.” Hanson said the Jewish community in Australia has “the same right to live in peace and harmony as all Australians,” and called on authorities to “be honest when revealing the identities and backgrounds of these murderers.”

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