Open Hiding
Jewish testimonies before Australia's Royal Commission paint a portrait of a culture already transformed—one in which Jewishness has become a professional and social liability
A collection of 10 posts
Jewish testimonies before Australia's Royal Commission paint a portrait of a culture already transformed—one in which Jewishness has become a professional and social liability
Why has Australia proved reluctant to confront antisemitism when its sources are treated as culturally or religiously sensitive?
A video essay examining the Chanukah terror attack at Bondi Beach, the acts of courage that unfolded in its aftermath, and the ideological and institutional failures that allowed antisemitism in Australia to escalate unchecked.
The Akram case exposes with brutal clarity that time does not ensure assimilation. Being born in Australia does not guarantee allegiance.
The refusal to discuss Islamic antisemitism in Australia endangers Jews and threatens social cohesion.
We have ignored, enabled, downplayed, and pandered to vicious antisemitism for too long. The victims of the Bondi massacre paid the price.
Why the Bondi attack was not an aberration, but the consequence of years of tolerated antisemitism across Australian public life.
Claire Lehmann reports from Bondi Beach on the sombre atmosphere and public anger following the terror attack.
The massacre at Bondi Beach was shocking—but after years of denial and equivocation about antisemitism, it was inevitable.
Fifteen people are dead after gunmen opened fire at a Jewish Hanukkah festival on one of Sydney’s most iconic beaches.