MEDIA RELEASE: ECAJ annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia [2019]

MEDIA RELEASE: ECAJ annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia [2019]

Please find below the ECAJ’s media release regarding our 2019 Report on Antisemitism in Australia, compiled by ECAJ Research Director Julie Nathan. The report itself can be viewed and down­loaded here.


There were 368 recorded antisemitic incidents in Australia during the year ending 30 September 2019, according to the annual Report on Antisemitism in Australia, published by the Executive Council of Aus­trali­an Jewry (ECAJ). The incidents were logged by the ECAJ, Jewish community roof bodies in each State, and other Jewish community groups and included physical assaults, abuse and har­ass­ment, vandalism, graffiti, hate and threats com­mu­nic­ated directly by email, letters, telephone calls, posters, stickers and leaflets. The total figure consists of 225 attacks and 143 threats.

“The overall number of antisemitic incidents continued at, and slightly exceeded, the unusually high number logged during 2018, which saw a 59% increase over the previous year”, said Julie Nathan, the ECAJ’s Research Director on Antisemitism.  “In 2019 there was also a marked increase in the ser­i­ous­ness of the incidents recorded.  Espe­cially con­cern­ing was the 30% spike in the number of reported incidents involving direct verbal abuse, har­ass­ment and intim­id­a­tion, from 88 in 2018 to 114 in 2019, and the more than doubling of the number of reported graffiti attacks, from 46 to 95.”

“The sharp jump in reported incidents of verbal abuse, har­ass­ment and intim­id­a­tion demon­strates that anti­semites felt increas­ingly emboldened to behave in an aggress­ive, con­front­a­tion­al and menacing way towards Jews who were doing nothing more than going about their daily lives,” Ms Nathan said.  “Jews continued to be verbally abused and harassed around syn­agogues on a regular basis, espe­cially over the Jewish Sabbath, and on other Jewish holy days and festivals. These are periods when many Jews are con­greg­at­ing at, and walking to or from, synagogue, providing anti­semites with an easy target”.

In addition Ms Nathan referred to the escal­a­tion in both the number and ser­i­ous­ness of antisemitic graffiti incidents.  “Not only did the number of graffiti attacks more than double, the messages included calls for the murder of Jews, and support for Hitler and Nazism”, Ms Nathan said. “Last year, by com­par­is­on, there were only two reported incidents of graffiti calling for the killing of Jews.  Holocaust denial was another common theme.”

Referring to the Federal election in May, Ms Nathan pointed to the “unpre­ced­en­ted” number of graffiti attacks using Nazi themes and images against the posters and campaign material of Jewish can­did­ates, and a series of viciously antisemitic circular emails about another candidate.

According to the ECAJ report, the rise in antisemitic incidents was par­alleled by a pro­lif­er­a­tion of antisemitic and pro-Nazi discourse online, espe­cially on online sites used by far-right, white suprem­acist, neo-Nazi, and other racist groups.

“A common theme was the “white replace­ment” theory which blames “the Jews” for the supposed demise and destruc­tion of the European races, culture and civil­isa­tion, including in Australia”, Ms Nathan said.  “This is the ideology embraced by the per­pet­rat­ors of mass shootings of people at prayer in syn­agogues in Pitt­s­burgh and San Diego and at mosques in Christ­ch­urch.  Many sub­scribers to this myth in Australia have openly expressed support for such actions and called for armed violence, revolu­tion, terrorism and race war.   As a result, and by necessity, physical security remains a prime concern not only for the Jewish community but also for the wider community.”

The ECAJ report notes that 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, unof­fi­cial antisemitism is becoming more serious, and there have been worrying signs that it is creeping into main­stream insti­tu­tions.

“Most dis­turb­ing were the reported incidents of antisemitic bullying of Jewish school­chil­dren at two Victorian public schools, and the mani­festly inad­equate way in which the schools handled those incidents”, Ms Nathan said.

“More subtle, but just as con­cern­ing, was the spread of calumnies about Jews beneath the cloak of political discourse about Israel.  Examples included a uni­ver­sity lecturer super­im­pos­ing the Nazi swastika symbol over the Israeli flag in lecture slides which were dis­sem­in­ated to students, and the utterly false claim made by a pro­fes­sion­al teaching body in July that Israel per­se­cutes Arabs because ‘they don’t follow the Jewish religion’”.

The ECAJ has supported the call recently made by UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, for urgent action by parents, teachers and community and political leaders to counter hate speech and ensure the safety of houses of worship “before under­ground hatred becomes an overt and alarming new normal.”

“We need not only strong anti-incite­ment laws but also sys­tem­at­ic education programs at schools and uni­ver­sit­ies and respons­ible messaging from community and political leaders”, Ms Nathan concluded.  “It’s not just a gov­ern­ment respons­ib­il­ity. Everyone stands to lose if racism continues to worsen. The respons­ib­il­ity falls on all of us”.

Contact:

Peter Wertheim AM | Co-CEO, ECAJ
phone: 02 8353 8500 | m: 0408 160 904
[email protected] | www.ecaj.org.au


TO DOWNLOAD THIS MEDIA RELEASE AS A PDF, CLICK HERE.

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

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