MEDIA RELEASE: ECAJ annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia [2018]

MEDIA RELEASE: ECAJ annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia [2018]

Please find below the ECAJ’s media release regarding our 2018 Report on Antisemitism in Australia, compiled by ECAJ Research Officer Julie Nathan. The report itself can be viewed and down­loaded here.


ECAJ annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia

The 12 month period ending 30 September 2018 saw a 59% increase over the previous year in total antisemitic incidents in Australia involving threats or acts of violence, according to the annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia published by the Executive Council of Aus­trali­an Jewry (ECAJ).

The ECAJ, Jewish community roof bodies in each State, and other Jewish community groups logged a total of 366 antisemitic incidents during the period, including physical assaults, abuse and har­ass­ment, vandalism, graffiti, hate and threats com­mu­nic­ated directly by email, letters, telephone calls, posters, stickers and leaflets. This compares to a total of 230 such incidents logged by the same sources over the preceding 12 month period, an overall increase of 136 incidents.

In the latest 12 month period, there were 156 attacks (assault, abuse, vandalism, and graffiti), account­ing for 43% of the total number of incidents. There were 210 threats (email, letters, telephone, leaflets, posters and stickers), account­ing for 57% of the total number of incidents. There is also much anecdotal evidence of incidents which go unre­por­ted.

Overall, between 2017 and 2018 the number of ‘attacks’ increased slightly (from 145 to 156), while the number of ‘threats’ increased by 147% (from 85 to 210). There was a marked increase in antisemitic abuse, vandalism, and threats via email, telephone, posters and stickers; a decrease in graffiti and threats by postal mail; while the number of physical assaults remained the same.

One group, Anti­podean Res­ist­ance, which has an overtly neo-Nazi ideology, was respons­ible for 133 (36%) of the year’s total of 366 incidents, mostly con­sist­ing of placing posters, stickers, graffiti and murals, and one incident of vandalism, in public places. The total number of incidents attrib­ut­able to Anti­podean Res­ist­ance rose from 50 in the previous year, a rise of 166%. It thus accounted for 83 of the addi­tion­al 136 incidents compared to the previous year. However, the activ­it­ies of Anti­podean Res­ist­ance do not account for the sig­ni­fic­ant increase in recorded incidents of verbal abuse/harassment and vandalism. 2

The ECAJ’s Research Officer, Julie Nathan, who authored the report, said “The evidence points clearly to a sharp increase in the number of antisemitic incidents in Australia. Jews continue to be verbally abused and harassed around syn­agogues on a regular basis, as well as on the streets in suburban areas.”

“The most notice­able change over the last twelve months in Australia has been the sig­ni­fic­ant increase in neo-Nazi activity, pre­dom­in­antly by Anti­podean Res­ist­ance. Members of Anti­podean Res­ist­ance have put up thousands of Nazi stickers and anti-Jewish, anti-homo­sexu­al and pro-Nazi posters, espe­cially at uni­ver­sit­ies, high schools, and other places visible to the public. Anti­podean Res­ist­ance has expli­citly promoted violence and murder, calling to “Legalise the execution of Jews”. It has also called for the killing of homo­sexu­als. Its posters graph­ic­ally depict and incite the use of firearms to shoot Jews and homo­sexu­als in the head. Anti­podean Res­ist­ance is a serious threat to the safety and security of Jews, homo­sexu­als, non-white immig­rants and ulti­mately to the entire community,” Nathan said.

Although Australia overall remains a stable, vibrant and tolerant democracy, where Jews face no official dis­crim­in­a­tion, and are free to observe their faith and tra­di­tions, antisemitism persists. There has been an increase in the activ­it­ies of groups which are not only hostile towards Jews, but actively and publicly express that hatred with words and threatened or actual violent acts. As a result, and by necessity, physical security remains a prime concern for the Jewish community.

Nathan said “The Jewish community is the only community within Australia whose places of worship, schools, communal organ­isa­tions and community centres need, for security reasons, to operate under the pro­tec­tion of high fences, armed guards, metal detectors, CCTV cameras and the like. The necessity is recog­nised by Aus­trali­a’s law enforce­ment agencies and arises from the entrenched and protean nature of antisemitism in western and Muslim culture, resulting in a high incidence of physical attacks against Jews and Jewish communal buildings over the last three decades, and con­tinu­ing threats.”

As the political far right increas­ingly becomes emboldened and more active, and as far right groups publicly denigrate, demonise and incite violence against Jews, among others, it is incumbent upon political and other leaders to demon­strate that antisemitism, and all other forms of racism, are totally unac­cept­able in Australia, and to ensure that policies, laws and other measures are adopted and imple­men­ted in order to effect­ively counter their effects.

TO DOWNLOAD THE 2018 ECAJ REPORT ON ANTISEMITISM IN AUSTRALIA, CLICK HERE.

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