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Antisemitism royal commission as it happened: Daughter of Bondi terror victim, Jewish leaders give evidence

Alexandra Smith and Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published

The day in review

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Thank you for reading our live coverage of the Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion in Sydney. The hearing has adjourned until 10am tomorrow. We’ll be back with live updates when proceedings commence at 10am.

Here are some of the key parts of today’s evidence.

  • Sheina Gutnick, the daughter of Bondi Beach terror attack victim Reuven Morrison, said there had been a “massive shift” after the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, in which 1200 people were killed and a further 250 were taken hostage. “From that point onwards I felt as though antisemitism was being allowed to come into the open,” she said. “That was completely unprecedented. All of a sudden it was socially, morally acceptable for antisemitic comments to be made in public.”
  • Holocaust survivor and Jewish-Australian Peter Halasz, the co-founder of iconic swimwear brand Seafolly, said that in the years before he fled persecution in Hungary he “lived with antisemitism next to me”. Now he is concerned about the future in this country. “If things don’t improve, one day we might have to think about leaving [Australia],” he said.
  • Stefanie Schwartz, president of the board of Mount Sinai College, an independent Jewish day school in Sydney with about 400 students, said students participate in “simulations and evacuation drills” to prepare for terrorist attacks. “I would imagine most schools would have a regular fire drill; something like that. At our school we do that, but we also have evacuation drills in the event of a terror attack.”
  • The youngest students at the college are two years old because there is an early learning centre, Schwartz said, and the oldest are only 11 or 12. She said the campus now “looks a lot more like a prison than a primary school”.
  • Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-chief executive Alex Ryvchin said there has been “soaring antisemitism” since the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023.

Volunteer medical service rushed to help at Bondi

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Dr Jeffrey Engelman is the co-founder of the not-for-profit, volunteer-driven, emergency medical response organisation Community Health Support (CHS), chiefly in Sydney’s eastern suburbs.

CHS was involved in responding to the Bondi terrorist attack in December last year, the royal commission heard.

“We provided a service which we’ve been acknowledged by the ambulance that if we weren’t there, more lives would have been lost,” Engelman said.

‘There is a lot more open antisemitism’

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Dr Jeffrey Engelman, son of the late Auschwitz survivor Yvonne Engelman, is the final witness giving evidence at the royal commission today.

His parents were founding members of the Sydney Jewish Museum and his father was also an Auschwitz survivor.

Engelman said his parents spoke five or six languages but chose to speak English with their children.

“They wanted us to be Australian,” he said. “They integrated very carefully into society.”

They had both Jewish and non-Jewish friends. Engelman said that he and his siblings were also proud Australians and he was not exposed to “serious antisemitism growing up”.

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Video from late Auschwitz survivor played

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The royal commission is playing a video of the late Auschwitz survivor Yvonne Engelman.

Engelman died in Australia last year, aged in her late 90s. Her parents died at the notorious concentration camp.

“They never succeeded to break my spirit,” she said of the Nazis.

“I had an opportunity which Australia gave us to start a new life. I am definitely not a hero, I am a very humble person.”

You can read more about her extraordinary story here.

‘I will fight with all my might’

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Anthony Halas said his greatest fear was that “this country will not be a safe place for my children, or their children, and we will have to leave”.

“I will fight with all my might to make sure that doesn’t happen,” Halas said.

Son of Holocaust survivor ‘horrified’ by conspiracy theories

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Anthony Halas, the son of Peter Halasz, is giving evidence after his father.

While his father spoke of fleeing persecution in Hungary, Halas said he had “applied for my Hungarian citizenship” as a “Plan B” if things did not improve in Australia.

Halas said he had a “wonderful upbringing” in Australia and did not attend Jewish schools. He had Jewish and non-Jewish friends.

But he said he became “horrified” by far-right antisemitic conspiracy theories he read online, starting at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Nothing was being done about it.”

Halas said that the demonstration on the steps of the Sydney Opera House after the October 7 Hamas attack in Israel in 2023 “chilled” him “to the bone”.

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‘I lived with antisemitism next to me’

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Holocaust survivor and Jewish-Australian Peter Halasz said that in the years before he fled Hungary he “lived with antisemitism next to me”. Now he is concerned about the future in this country.

“If things don’t improve, one day we might have to think about leaving [Australia],” the co-founder of iconic swimwear brand Seafolly said.

He was afraid for his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

He asked the royal commission to listen carefully to the Jewish community, including the young people wondering if they are safe to go to university and “the old men like me who are wondering for the first time in decades if they are safe”.

Holocaust survivor and Seafolly founder gives powerful evidence

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Holocaust survivor and Jewish-Australian Peter Halasz, co-founder of iconic Australian swimwear brand Seafolly, is now giving evidence. He is a “proud Australian citizen”, the 86-year-old says.

“I feel a deep obligation to speak while I still can,” he said. He said he spoke not with bitterness but with urgency.

He said what is happening in Australia today is “not a faint echo of a distant past” and “that recognition is frightening and cause for alarm”.

Halasz said that when he was growing up he learnt that being Jewish was “a liability, a source of danger” and he had to conceal who he was.

“That lesson took many years to unlearn,” Halasz said.

‘That could have easily been us’: Fears after Bondi

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Toby Raphael, vice president of Newtown Synagogue, said that on the night of the Bondi attack the synagogue was also holding a Hanukkah event.

There was a joint Christmas and Hanukkah party on the street, he said, and it was a lovely atmosphere. Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore and federal government minister Tanya Plibersek were in attendance.

He said after he lit the menorah (an eight-branched candelabra) they had to evacuate immediately.

“That could have easily been us. You just don’t know where those people are going to choose to get you.”

He said the Bondi attack “changed the course of my life” and that of many others.

“Why do kids have to go to school like that? It’s not right,” he said of security measures required to keep children safe. “Now everyone is scared all the time.”

In the past he had never considered security measures were needed at his synagogue.

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‘Shell-shocked’: Antisemitic attack during Sydney uni protest

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Toby Raphael, vice-president of Newtown Synagogue, is now giving evidence.

He said the Australia he arrived in from England as a child in the 1980s is not the Australia he lives in today.

“I was treated as an equal person. No one cared that I was a Jew,” he said of his childhood. He lived around the Balmain area in Sydney’s inner west and it was a “nice lifestyle”, he said.

He encountered a protest at the University of Sydney in April 2024 after he went to synagogue for Passover. He stopped to find out “what it’s all about” and was wearing his yarmulke (skull-cap).

He said someone yelled at him, “You dirty f---ing pig Jew”, and “spat in my face”. Nobody helped him.

Asked how he felt after the attack, Raphael said: “Shell-shocked. I was in trauma. I couldn’t believe it. I was probably quite livid, to be honest.”

He was also asked about the daubing of swastikas in red spray paint on the synagogue’s new front fence. Police discovered evidence of attempted arson, the royal commission heard.

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