Lessons learnt after 7 October

Lessons learnt after 7 October

This opinion piece by ECAJ Research Director Julie Nathan was originally published on J‑Wire and the Times of Israel.

A year after the October 7 massacre of Israelis in 2023, what have we learnt? For Jews in the diaspora, there have been several lessons.

Antisemitism

After the Holocaust, expres­sions of anti-Jewish hatred were forced under­ground in the Western world. We hoped it would forever be banished from our lives. But we knew it was still there as hate pro­pa­ganda and violence against Jews continued after 1945, albeit at lesser levels than in previous centuries. We believed we were of a gen­er­a­tion, post WW2, that could live our lives, rel­at­ively safely, in the West without fear or dread of being targeted because we were Jewish. Since October 7, there has been an explosive surge in anti-Jewish hate and violence across the world. We now know that the rabid beast of anti-Jewish hate has been unleashed and is prowling the streets from London to New York, Toronto to Sydney.

Authorities

It was thought that liberal demo­crat­ic countries would provide pro­tec­tion from acts of hate and violence against Jewish minor­it­ies. That has generally been the case – up until October 7. But we learnt a new lesson, the hard way – that in the 2020s Western world, many gov­ern­ments are choosing to appease extremist elements within their countries, and globally, rather than stand firm on principle and act against anti-Jewish vili­fic­a­tion and threats. We learnt that we cannot rely on our gov­ern­ments to protect us from harm by anti-Jewish racists. We learnt that too often the police are either unable or unwilling to act to curb hatred on the streets. We now know that the Jewish community has been pushed aside and left undefen­ded by many gov­ern­ments and police, while they try to appease the extrem­ists.

Societal structures

We thought that others with influence and power would stand against anti-Jewish racism. We thought journ­al­ists and the media would invest­ig­ate and provide facts and proper context in their news stories, but instead, much journ­al­ism became advocacy for a cause, ignoring or down­play­ing anti-Jewish racism and con­demning Israel, omitting relevant facts, dis­tort­ing stories, showing bias. We thought human rights and anti-dis­crim­in­a­tion bodies would support us, instead they not only turned their back, but in some cases employed people who were hostile to Jews. We saw that uni­ver­sit­ies defended vili­fic­a­tion and threats towards Jews in the name of robust free speech, or perhaps it was out of cowardice, unwilling to tackle hate and instead choosing appease­ment. We saw much of the arts and culture scene turn into a festival of anti-Jewish hate. We now know that the basic struc­tures of the society are falling and many either allow, or cheer on, the extrem­ists to continue their destruct­ive path.

Progressive allies

While there is no ‘Jewish position’ on politics, many Jews have been active in civil rights movements, rallying for equality, oppos­i­tion to racism, sexism, and in support of other pro­gress­ive causes. It was done because it was the right thing to do. Now that Jews are under attack, our so-called ‘pro­gress­ive allies’ have not only abandoned us, but often are at the forefront leading the attacks against us. They spuri­ously claim it is not because we are Jews, but because we are Zionists, who support the continued existence of the one and only Jewish state in the world, the state of Israel in the Jewish national ancestral homeland. We now know that our former allies, faux-friends, were not anti-racists after all.

Convergence of extremes

We now see a much clearer con­ver­gence of the extreme Right, extreme Left and extreme Islamist. They propose that the “only solution” to the problems of the world is violent “revolu­tion”. The pro­pos­i­tions by these extrem­ists have as their ultimate aim the elim­in­a­tion of Jews from the world.

Neo-Nazi poster, Adelaide 2022; anti-Israel placard, Melbourne 2024

The neo-Nazis promote “White Revolu­tion is the Only Solution” (as seen in National Socialist Network posters over the years). ‘White Revolu­tion” is linked with the ideas of “Race War” and “White Genocide”. The latter is the false belief that there is a global con­spir­acy orches­trated by “the Jews” for the express purpose of decim­at­ing the European races. Hence, “Race War” is used in the acronym GTKRWN (“Gas The Kikes, Race War Now”), as a signal that “the Jews” (derog­at­ively referred to as “kikes”) are the prime enemy, and are the ones to be targeted and anni­hil­ated in order to win the “Race War.”

The anti-Israel movement, encom­passing both the extreme Left and Islamists, promotes “There is Only One Solution: Intifada Revolu­tion” (as seen in their chants and placards). ‘Intifada’ is a call to violence against Jews in Israel and beyond as enacted with the murder of Jews through bombing buses and cafes, shooting and stabbing Jews in the streets, and other methods of killing. The aim is to drive out or kill the Jews to make the Arab Islamic world Jew-free and restore Arab Islamic dominance and supremacy from Morrocco to Iraq.

While the extreme Left seeks to impose an inter­na­tion­al­ist total­it­ari­an ‘socialist utopia’, the Islamists seek to impose a theo-fascist state, and even­tu­ally a world-wide caliphate, using violent jihad as the main means of conquest. Just as Hamas, Hezbollah, Houthis and at the head, Iran, all have ideo­lo­gies to murder and anni­hil­ate Jews from the world, so to do Islamists in the West. In the streets, their war chant of “Khaybar Khaybar ya yahud, jaish Muhammad soufa ya’oud” (“Khaybar Khaybar oh Jews, the army of Muhammad will return”, referring to a massacre of Jews by Muslims at Khaybar in 628 CE) is used as a war-cry to threaten and attack Jews in Western cities, a precursor to a global massacre of Jews.

Western civilisation

Western civil­isa­tion is one of the great civil­isa­tions of the world. Although not perfect, it has developed into one of the freest and most humane societies in the world. Many of the values and ideals of Western civil­isa­tion derive from the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible): broth­er­hood of humanity; the sanctity of human life; the dignity of each person; indi­vidu­al con­science; social respons­ib­il­ity; indi­vidu­al rights; equality before the law; a vision of a society founded on justice; and universal peace as an ideal. These Judaic values have been adopted by the Western world through democracy, lib­er­al­ism, human rights and the rule of law. These are values to be cherished, upheld and defended.

October 7 brought into sharp focus an increas­ingly polarised world-view – of Western civil­isa­tion­al values versus anti-demo­crat­ic values, the latter belonging to the extreme Right, extreme Left, and extreme Islamists. The anti-Jewish, anti-Western, anti-demo­crat­ic forces are aggress­ively taking their battle for supremacy into the heart of the West. We see quite a few weak Western gov­ern­ments and insti­tu­tions, perhaps not under­stand­ing what is at stake, buckling at the knees, either in appease­ment or in fear of the anti-demo­crat­ic forces, whether Islamists or Leftists, on the streets in their cities and in the insti­tu­tions of their countries, under­min­ing and corroding the fabric of Western civil­isa­tion.

Conclusion

With the beast of anti-Jewish hatred unleashed, with many gov­ern­ments not pro­tect­ing Jewish com­munit­ies as they should, with many people of influence turning their backs, with pro­gress­ive allies not standing with Jews as they should, with the far Left and Islamists openly defending or cel­eb­rat­ing the massacre of October 7 and promising more, and with anti-Western and anti-demo­crat­ic forces invig­or­ated by October 7, the situation looks dire. Despite the ongoing trauma of October 7, and despite the aban­don­ment and betrayal of Jews by many, the lessons we have learnt have grounded us.

We also learnt that there are many other people who are standing with Jewish com­munit­ies around the world in the name of decency, humanity and shared values. We know there are some gov­ern­ments, politi­cians, police, media, human rights bodies, pro­gress­ives, and many ordinary fellow-citizens who stand with Jewish com­munit­ies in our common struggle against hate and violence, and the threats facing our liberal demo­crat­ic societies.

The global Jewish community has faced many dire and deadly foes over the millennia, and several genocidal enemies. As Mark Twain wrote in 1899: “The Egyptian, the Baby­lo­ni­an, and the Persian rose … the Greek and the Roman followed… and they are gone… other peoples… have vanished. The Jew saw them all, beat them all… All things are mortal but the Jew; all other forces pass, but he remains.”

And so too, in this current dire situation, the global Jewish community will remain and will prevail. And the barbarism of anti-Jewish hate will be defeated, again.

What you need to know about the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion.

What you need to know about the Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism (Criminal and Migration Laws) Act 2026 passed in the wake of the Bondi Beach attack.

ECAJ submission to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security review

ECAJ statement on the attack on a rally in Perth.

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