Commentary from co-CEO Alex Ryvchin originally published in The Daily Telegraph on 7 October 2025.
We often view history through single moments. Assassinations, revolutions, declarations of war or peace.
In reality, the moment merely reveals a truth that was long ignored. The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr laid bare a deeply divided country despite the veneer of a march towards harmony and reconciliation.
Putin’s invasion of Ukraine showed us that Cold War insecurities and bitter feuds were never solved. And October 7 showed us the post-Holocaust platitudes about “Never Again”, and the pride in successful Australian multiculturalism, were hardly worth the air they were uttered into.
On October 7, 6000 Gazans invaded Israel by land, sea and air with the precise aim of killing every man, woman and child they encountered. The methods of killing, including burning alive, torture, decapitation were as much about satisfying the savage instincts of the killers as it was about causing chaos.
What October 7 really achieved was to show us what was always there. It revealed that the Israeli belief in managing the conflict with the Palestinians through military and technological prowess was a doomed cop-out that would neither avoid war nor deliver peace.
It showed that tyrannical regimes can riddle our society with paranoia, suspicion and bigotry by pumping social media content that repackages old libels about child-killing, blood-thirsty Jews. It showed that if you present seemingly ordinary people with a suitable villain they will happily release all their angst, confusion and resentment upon it. And it showed us that western governments are so paralysed by polls, factions and plain old incompetence, that they are incapable of stopping a crisis that unfolds with complete predictability.
Looking back on the past two years since October 7, Jewish Australians have been forced to deal with everything from the terrifying to the absurd. Cruel nurses, terror attacks co-ordinated and executed by some combination of common criminals, Iranian generals and criminal masterminds. A small business turning Jews away wanting to hire jumping castles for a school fair.
Degenerates celebrating mass slaughter on our streets. Hate preachers. Hamas-themed kids parties. A tradie threatening to kill young Jews for displaying the flag of Israel. A pro-Palestine buffoon riding a horse with irritable bowels up and down another.
Something else was revealed by October 7. A community doesn’t know what it’s made of until it is severely tested. And Australia’s Jews, standing with friends and allies throughout this marvellous nation, have shown what they are really made of. Even as their livelihoods were threatened, their place in society challenged, their freedom to simply identify as Jewish was turned into an act of bravery or defiance, Jewish Australians stood strong.
Now, two years on, despite everything, we remain unflinchingly patriotic and proud to be Australian, decent in the face of provocation, cool in the face of fireballs. We remain unbowed, unbroken, unbeaten.
ECAJ Head of Legal Simone Abel discusses the latest on antisemitism at the University of Sydney, and the court victory that stopped the Sydney Opera House protest.
Community unbroken through the hate and madness
Community unbroken through the hate and madness
Commentary from co-CEO Alex Ryvchin originally published in The Daily Telegraph on 7 October 2025.
We often view history through single moments. Assassinations, revolutions, declarations of war or peace.
In reality, the moment merely reveals a truth that was long ignored. The assassination of Martin Luther King Jr laid bare a deeply divided country despite the veneer of a march towards harmony and reconciliation.
Putin’s invasion of Ukraine showed us that Cold War insecurities and bitter feuds were never solved. And October 7 showed us the post-Holocaust platitudes about “Never Again”, and the pride in successful Australian multiculturalism, were hardly worth the air they were uttered into.
On October 7, 6000 Gazans invaded Israel by land, sea and air with the precise aim of killing every man, woman and child they encountered. The methods of killing, including burning alive, torture, decapitation were as much about satisfying the savage instincts of the killers as it was about causing chaos.
What October 7 really achieved was to show us what was always there. It revealed that the Israeli belief in managing the conflict with the Palestinians through military and technological prowess was a doomed cop-out that would neither avoid war nor deliver peace.
It showed that tyrannical regimes can riddle our society with paranoia, suspicion and bigotry by pumping social media content that repackages old libels about child-killing, blood-thirsty Jews. It showed that if you present seemingly ordinary people with a suitable villain they will happily release all their angst, confusion and resentment upon it. And it showed us that western governments are so paralysed by polls, factions and plain old incompetence, that they are incapable of stopping a crisis that unfolds with complete predictability.
Looking back on the past two years since October 7, Jewish Australians have been forced to deal with everything from the terrifying to the absurd. Cruel nurses, terror attacks co-ordinated and executed by some combination of common criminals, Iranian generals and criminal masterminds. A small business turning Jews away wanting to hire jumping castles for a school fair.
Degenerates celebrating mass slaughter on our streets. Hate preachers. Hamas-themed kids parties. A tradie threatening to kill young Jews for displaying the flag of Israel. A pro-Palestine buffoon riding a horse with irritable bowels up and down another.
Something else was revealed by October 7. A community doesn’t know what it’s made of until it is severely tested. And Australia’s Jews, standing with friends and allies throughout this marvellous nation, have shown what they are really made of. Even as their livelihoods were threatened, their place in society challenged, their freedom to simply identify as Jewish was turned into an act of bravery or defiance, Jewish Australians stood strong.
Now, two years on, despite everything, we remain unflinchingly patriotic and proud to be Australian, decent in the face of provocation, cool in the face of fireballs. We remain unbowed, unbroken, unbeaten.
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