DIASPORA JEWS ARE NO LONGER FREE

Washington DC, Colorado, Manchester, Bondi. Where next?

By Sir Mick Davis

(Courtesy of The Spectator where this article first appeared)

Jews had gathered on Bondi Beach to celebrate the first night of Chanukah, the festival of light and freedom. Uniquely among Jewish festivals, Chanukah is celebrated in public. Generations of families came to light candles on Sydney’s famous coastline and say: we belong here too. And then two gunmen opened fire: 15 people murdered; 40 wounded. The victims include London born Rabbi Eli Schlanger and Alex Kleytman, who survived the Holocaust but, 80 years later was murdered for being a Jew.

Bondi Beach Massacre. This is what “Globalise the Intifada” looks like – 15 Jews dead, scores wounded.

On Bondi Beach, Jews celebrating that freedom were attacked and murdered.

This was not ‘senseless violence’ – the very phrase stupefies us into passivity, unable to name, identify and deal with the specific hatred behind it. This was a calculated attack on Jews celebrating a festival that commemorates our refusal to be erased from the public square, our determination to spread light in the face of darkness and maintain freedom despite tyranny.

The bitter truth, however, is that in 2025, Jews in the Diaspora are no longer free, but shackled by antisemitism. Our children learn lessons no child should: where the exits are, what to do if the glass breaks. We worship behind bulletproof doors and bombproof windows after passing through security guards not because we want to, but because we must. We are sick of explaining this, having our concerns dismissed or minimised and having to go through the same tiresome process after each and every outrage.

It cannot be only our problem. If a society’s Jews aren’t free neither is that society.

But we refuse to give in to the relentless campaign to intimidate and erase us. The message is constant: you live here on sufferance. You may be tolerated, but only if you are invisible. When Jews venture out publicly, we are targeted by hostility that too many have normalised.

We have warned that where Jew-hatred is normalised, anti-Jewish violence is inevitable. The so-called ‘pro-Palestine’ marches week after week have been recruiting grounds for those who carry out violence and those who justify it. Hate-filled demonstrations outside synagogues precede bullets through their doors. Calls for murder outside opera houses precede murders on beaches.

Why the Surprise? From calls to murder Jews outside Sydney Opera House to murdering Jews on a Sydney beach only kilometers away.

Washington DC, Colorado, Manchester, Bondi. Where next?

On the streets of London, Manchester, Sydney, New York and Paris, mobs have chanted for violence, glorified terror and demonised Jews with language that would be instantly recognised as incitement if used against any other minority. Jewish students harassed, Jewish businesses vandalised, Jewish events cancelled after being deemed ‘too difficult’ to protect.

We need more than perfunctory condemnation when the drumbeat of hate predictably leads to bloodshed. We need action.

Democracies must allow protest but the language and actions of protests matter. Protests that undermine the rights of others to exist safely are not legitimate dissent but calls for violence.

Who will stand up instead of standing by?

We don’t ask that everyone be like Ahmed al Ahmed, the heroic onlooker who with breathtaking courage disarmed one of the shooters and is now recovering in hospital. We do, however, expect those who can act to do so – from government, to police, to music venues, universities and broadcasters.

The authorities and wider public must make clear that it is the antisemites and not the Jews who will be erased from public spaces.

First, call it what it is: antisemitism. Not ‘community tension’, not ‘imported conflict’. Jew-hatred, adapted for modern tastes, laundered through modern slogans, and unleashed on Jews. Saying death to Zionists it is not just violent language but antisemitic. Recognise that saying death to the ‘Zionist entity’ means death to the Jews – the outcomes are indistinguishable.

Second, draw red lines and enforce them. Protect protest, of course, but reject incitement and intimidation. If a march, a concert or public event calls for violence, glorifies Jew-killing terrorist groups, uses antisemitic imagery or vilifies a minority community it is not a protest for democratic rights but a threat to them and should result in arrests and prosecutions far more often.

Third, stop indulging and making excuses for Jew-hate because confronting it is inconvenient. Stop the backdoor boycott of ‘safety concerns’ whether at comedy venues or European football matches. If Jews aren’t safe, neither are you.

Finally: choose solidarity that costs something. Not boilerplate statements but the solidarity that shows up – at vigils, schools, synagogues – in daylight, openly, without fear or equivocation.

We get to this point when the majority are silent in the face of evil. Jews are all too aware of those who hate us but it is the bystanders who send a shiver down our spine: universities too cowardly to condemn antisemitic incitement; media companies who platform terrorist apologists; sporting bodies whose response to murdered Jews is pathetic; police turning a blind eye to or failing to recognise virulently antisemitic chants; the friends and colleagues with something to say about everything but nothing to say about this.

‘Free’ to Hate. The ‘hate Israel’ marches week after week have proved recruiting grounds for those to carry out violence against Jews.

And here is perhaps the most pernicious idea of all: that some people possess a unique pain that allows them to disrupt society and deprive Jews of basic freedoms. Freedom of association. Freedom to walk the streets without fear. Freedom to practice their religion. Freedom to have a connection to the only Jewish country on earth without vilification. Freedom simply to be.

The lights of Chanukah are not lights of naïveté, but of resolve. The Maccabees pushed back against a powerful empire because it sought to erase their freedom and identity. On Bondi Beach, Jews celebrating that freedom were attacked and murdered.

Our societies must now decide whether we mean it when we say ‘never again’. And history will record who stood up, and who stood by.



About the writer:


Sir Mick Davis is a former chair of the Jewish Leadership Council and chair of the Commission on Holocaust Education. He is co-founder of The London Initiative.







BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS

“Never Again” was an empty promise

By Andrew Fox

Bondi. Manchester. Washington. Colorado. The list continues. Today, Jewish blood was shed on the sands of Bondi Beach. Fifteen Jews were shot at a Hanukkah celebration in Sydney, with dozens more wounded. I am utterly furious. I am incandescent with rage. This horror did not happen out of nowhere. We all saw it coming. Again.

Never again”? Yeah, right.

A March to a Massacre. This mass protest on Sydney’s Harbour Bridge was organized by the Sydney branch of the Palestine Action – the radical group  banned in the UK for glorifying terrorism. Displaying sick irony being branded the “March for Humanity”, the protest was rife with antisemitic manifestations with participants chanting “Death to the IDF” and “Long live the Intifada” — a slogan understood to promoting terrorism against Jews. 

It was not an isolated act of madness in Australia; it exists everywhere. In Manchester this past Yom Kippur, a jihadist rammed a car into worshippers and stabbed people at a synagogue, murdering two Jews before police subdued him. In Washington, DC, an American gunman opened fire outside a Jewish museum, killing two young Israeli embassy staffers. As he was arrested, he shouted “Free, free Palestine!” to reveal the twisted ideology that fuelled his slaughter. In Colorado, an Egyptian immigrant attacked a peaceful pro-Israel rally with a homemade flamethrower and Molotov cocktails, injuring seven; an 82-year-old woman later died from her burns. From continent to continent, Jews are being hunted.

Enough.

For two years now, since Hamas launched its latest war, a wave of anti-Jewish hate has swept through the West. The warning signs have been flashing: in Australia, anti-Jewish incidents tripled in the year after the war began. Similar spikes have occurred across Europe and the USA.

Swastikas on schools. Mobs chanting for intifada. Jewish students hiding their Stars of David. It has been escalating steadily. Now the inevitable has happened again – the hate has turned murderous. We know precisely who helped create this atmosphere. I am looking at everyone who fed this beast. Every single one of them has blood on their hands.

Everyone who spent two years spreading antisemitic blood libels straight from Hamas — blood on their hands. (They parroted every lie Hamas spewed, from fake “hospital massacres” to wild casualty figures. They stoked the flames that led directly to Bondi and beyond.)

Writing was on the Railing. Two weeks before the Bondi Beach Chanukkah massacre on the 14 December, Bondi Beach in Sydney was hit by antisemitic graffiti on November 29, 2025 where families with children arriving in the morning saw slogans including “Fuck the IDF” and “Free Palestine” sprayed on the beachfront.

Everyone sucked in by Hamas propaganda, who spent two years shrieking online about “Gaza genocide” or confected war crimes while excusing or ignoring Hamas’s atrocities — blood on their hands.

Everyone who attended the weekly hate marches in Western cities, those angry street mobs that normalised Jew-hatred under the guise of “Free Palestine” — blood on their hands. They created the permissive atmosphere for this violence.

Everyone who took Qatari or Iranian media money to peddle lies about Israel — blood on their hands. (They know who they are – the talking heads on state-backed TV channels, selling out truth for petro-dollars and spreading venom.)

South Africa’s leaders and their fellow travelers, Amnesty International and other NGOs, and all those who kept slandering Israel with vexatious “genocide” accusations – blood on their hands. Their propaganda provided moral cover to Hamas and depicted Jews as rightful targets.

Every country that rewarded Hamas’s 7th October massacre by recognising a Palestinian state (a move Netanyahu rightly called a “huge reward to terrorism”) — blood on their hands. Instead of isolating the genocidal Hamas regime, they gave its supporters hope and legitimacy. Terrorists drew encouragement from their cowardice.

The hack researchers and NGOs churning out pseudo-academic garbage about Gaza: Airwars, AOAV, The Lancet, and others, treating casualty figures and social media posts as absolute truth — blood on their hands. By exaggerating and/or politicizing casualty numbers and events in Gaza without proper context, they portrayed Israel as a villain and incited mobs worldwide.

Those ideological extremists who cheer every pro-Palestinian criminal and even support terrorists on hunger strike to blackmail the justice system — blood on their hands. They may pretend it is about human rights, but their one-sided backing for pro-Palestinian terrorism (even after 7 October) has emboldened the worst Jew-haters.

Every politician and official who ignored the warning signs, who looked the other way time after time after time — blood on their hands. You had one job: to protect your citizens. To protect Jews. They failed, and now Jews lie dead on a beach, in a synagogue, and on city streets on their watch.

How long can our leaders ignore this?

How many red lines must be crossed?

I am tired of the empty platitudes and crocodile tears from politicians who let this climate fester. They downplayed antisemitism when it was graffiti, flag-waving, or relentless harassment. They shrugged when thousands marched through our capitals waving terrorist flags and shouting for intifada, week after week. They stayed silent when Jewish families begged for protection. Now those same leaders act shocked at the carnage? Spare me. Their cowardice and appeasement helped unleash this nightmare.

Mark my words: sooner or later, good and honest citizens will take matters into their own hands. If the authorities refuse to crack down on this violent Jew-hatred, people will feel they have no choice but to defend themselves. When that day comes, and if vigilante violence erupts because governments failed to act, there will be even more blood on the hands of those who enabled all this. I dread that possibility, but can anyone blame Jews and their true allies for being at the breaking point? For feeling abandoned and desperate?

Streets of Sydney. All these Sydney protestors inciting hatred against Jews by the messages on their posters and banners have “blood on their hands”.

I am furious. Searing, righteous fury, and I will not apologise for it. The murders at Bondi Beach have shattered any illusion of safety. Jews are bleeding, dying, in 2025, in free countries, simply for being Jewish. This is not just a Jewish problem. It is a problem for everyone who believes in decency and civilisation.

No more.

No more indulgence for the hatemongers. No more free passes for the enablers and apologists. Politicians: clean up this mess now, before it spirals further. Protect your Jewish citizens as you promised, or step aside for someone who will.

The blood cries out from Bondi, from Manchester, from Washington and Colorado. To all those who lit the fuse and fanned the flames: I hold you responsible. Their blood is on your hands, and it will never wash off.



About the writer:

A veteran of three grueling tours of Afghanistan, Major Andrew Fox holds a Batchelor’s degree in Law & Politics, a Master’s in Military History & War Studies, and is currently studying for a PhD in History.