
On the warmest day since autumn, a peaceful, family-oriented gathering at Bondi BeachĀ ā initiated by Jews Against the Occupation ā48Ā āĀ on September 7 was met with racist, intimidating abuse from Zionists waving Israeli flags and their apparent allies, white supremacistsĀ draped in Australian flags.
I am Jewish. What IĀ saw on SundayĀ shook me to my core.
For 23 months now, we have heard endlessly from Zionist organisations about how unsafe they feel and how intimidated they are by the supposed rise in antisemitism. The inference is that pro-Palestine protests make Jews unsafe.
I have attended most pro-Palestine protests during these 23 months. Unless you support Israelās genocide in Gaza, there is no reason to feel intimidated.
Our Bondi event was planned in solidarity with the Global Sumud FlotillaĀ ā the humanitarian mission sailing to break Israelās illegal siege of Gaza. Held on Fatherās Day, the gathering was to honour countless children in Gaza who have lost their fathers, and countless fathers who have lost their children.
Hundreds of paper origami boats were made to be launched into the sea, symbolising the more than 60 boats heading to Gaza.
This peaceful event was a collaboration between JAOā48 and Eastern Suburbs for Palestine; Coalition of Women for Justice and Peace; Hope Uniting Church; Randwick Botany Greens; and Surfboard Riders for Palestine.
Zionists mobilise
Zionist organisations launched an online campaign in its lead-up to discredit and threaten the gathering.
StandWithUs Australia, one of the most visible pro-Israel advocacy organisations globally, issued a graphic with a red cross over our poster, captioned: āNo, Not In Our Backyard. They bring hate and support for terror to our community. We will not stay silent.ā
They framed the gathering as a āprovocationā and called on people to āstand unitedā at Bondi Beach, bringing flags and voices.
The Australian Jewish Association (AJA) went further, posting: āThe Jewish community is not going to sit by and allow a bunch of troublemakers to bring their hate to Bondi Beach ⦠Members of the Jewish community have plans to confront this hate.ā
This was not a call for dialogue. It was a call to mobilise ā and it worked.
Even those with no interest in Israel or Palestine would surely be appalled by anyone claiming Australiaās most famous beach as their own. Bondi sits on the unceded lands of the Bidjigal, Birrabirragal and Gadigal peoples. It is an unwritten rule that our beaches are open to everyone.Ā Unlike other countries, we donāt have fee-paying beach clubs.
Neither the AJA nor the Jewish Board of Deputies mentioned that Jews ā severalĀ of whom areĀ from the eastern suburbs/Bondi itself ā were organising the event. Instead, they stressed attendees were ācoming from outside the areaā, a subtle but clear nod towardĀ racism.
Support for our peaceful event was overwhelming.Ā I saw social media posts and comments from Zionists beforehand, but I could never have imagined the numbers who would turn up to confront us.
Their meeting point was shared the night before. I was relieved they were gathering on the grass at the north end of the beach, while we were on the sand in front of the Pavilion ā the beachās centre. I assumed that after the anti-immigration and anti-racism/pro-Palestine protests in the CBD on August 31, which police kept apart, the same would happen. It did not.
Counter-protesters fly in
For safety reasons, we travelled to the event in small groups. Pause for a moment: Sydneysiders attending a peaceful family event were in fear for their safety. Havenāt we been told ad infinitum that Zionist Jews have been fearful for 23 months?
On arrival, my heart sank. Hundreds had answered the Zionistsā call. They stood on the promenade, waving Israeli and Australian flags, shouting abuse. Some were reportedly linked to far-right and neo-Nazi groups present at last weekās anti-immigration March for Australia.
The militant Zionist group, Lions of Zion, had flown members in from Naarm/Melbourne to stand alongside them, as did StandWithUs.
I joined JAOā48 and hundreds of other Sydneysiders ā many of whom are Palestinians grieving loved ones in Gaza ā on the sand. I couldnāt hold back my tears looking up at the promenade to the young men draped in the Israeli flag, supposedly āmy brethrenā, tainting Jewishness and trampling on the meaning of āNever Againā.
How many of them have served or are serving in theĀ Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) participating in a genocide?
The pro-Palestine supporters walked towards the shore. Michelle Berkon, who conceived and planned the event, gave a speech honouring the brave flotilla activists, including the Australian and New Zealand contingent. She reminded us we stood on stolen land. Greens Senator David Shoebridge stressed that in the face of genocide we must do all we can to stop it. Both urged us not to engage with the thugs on the promenade.
In the background, the vile chants included: āYouāre all terrorists!ā; āGo back to Lakemba!ā; āGet off our beach!ā; āThis is our beachā; āYou can stick your Palestine up youāre a-holeā; āSend them homeā; āWhite Australiaā; āDeport you allā; and āNo dogs on the beachā. Palestinians were accused of being rapists. Some denied Gaza children were starving. Their taunts were intertwined with choruses of āAussie, Aussie, Aussieā.
Antisemitic jibes were directed at Jewish attendees: āAre you coming to shulĀ [synagogue] on Friday?ā A Zionist teenager draped in an Israeli flag sneered at my sign, which said āThis Jewish woman says never again means to anyoneā, and told me: āNo Jewish woman has ever said thatā.
That boy had been raised on Zionist propaganda. Soon, he could be off to join theĀ IOF enforcing occupation and apartheid.
Police were present, but insufficient: They admitted they lacked numbers to prevent a mass surge if the mob decided to rush the beach. They had been blindsided by the scale of the protest and failed to keep the Zionists and their allies in their original meeting spot on the grass.
In contrast, the rallies for Palestine in the CBD are heavily policed, despite always being peaceful. But at Bondi, there was none, even though there had been a credible threat made against us.
Paper boats were released into the sea. Surfers paddled out with large Palestinian flags. Sea shanty singers led us in call-and-response songs. The singing, cheers, and waves drowned out the promenade chants. Thatās why we had come.
We built a āFree Gazaā sand sculpture while waiting for police to cordon an area so we could leave safely.
Imagine if the roles were reversed and we had been given move-on orders. Every politician would be issuing statements and calling for protests to be banned the very next day. As we approached the stairs up from the sand, the jeering grew louder. A mum and her 3-year-old child were shouted at by a Zionist, saying: āI hope youāre all killedā.
Media spin
It was no surprise to see how the mainstream media spun what happened at Bondi. The words they used were ābrawlsā, āscufflesā, ātwo sides of protestsā, ātensions raisedā, āfisticuffsā ā implying that the pro-Palestine gathering on the sand was, in some way, violent and equivalent to the far-right mob that faced us.
We were made out to be the provocateurs to our abusers, reminiscent of the āYou made me do itā defence in domestic violence.Ā
To those still repeating the tired phrase āsocial cohesionā, look no further than last weekās far-right, anti-immigration rallies and the Zionist mobs and their far-right allies who threatened and harassed a peaceful, multi-faith, multi-ethnic community gathering.
The supposed antisemitism envoy Jillian Segal has remained conspicuously silent.
Most disturbing in the mainstream media coverage is the repeated vilification of Palestinian voices. Where is the condemnation? We have hate speech laws in NSW, apparently, but are they being applied?
[Judith Treanor is a member of Jews Against the Occupation ā48 and helped organise the Bondi BeachĀ Global Sumud Flotilla event. This article was first published at .]