Hate and violence strike again with Bondi Beach massacre
"We will not be afraid if they try to take us down, even on the glorious beaches of Sydney Australia"
"We will not be afraid if they try to take us down, even on the glorious beaches of Sydney Australia"
A day earlier, Australia's Jewish community gathered at Bondi Beach for prayers, while hundreds of swimmers and surfers formed a huge circle in the waters off the beach to honor victims.
There are "no current or impending threats to the community," AFP confirmed.
Sir Mark Rowley, the Metropolitan Police commissioner, said that it is legal in the UK to “intentionally stir up racial hatred, so long as one avoids being threatening, abusive or insulting.”
The community is largely unscathed by antisemitism and has existed here for centuries, fully integrated as Indians and Jews.
Albanese said the event he attended at the Great Synagogue in Sydney on Friday night showed "the spirit of our Jewish Australian community is completely unbreakable."
“I named her Matilda because she was our firstborn in Australia. And I thought that Matilda was the most Australian name that could ever exist,” said father Michael.
Mayor Eduardo Martinez of Richmond, California, reposted conspiracy theories that claimed the Bondi Beach attack on a Hanukkah celebration was a “false flag” perpetrated by Israel.
The nanny was quoted as telling police that she "never should have worked for a Jewish woman" while in custody.
The 82-page ruling, by Judge Nina R. Morrison of the Eastern District of New York, effectively strips both the district attorney and the city of the legal immunity they usually have.
“I am highly skeptical of whether this administration actually cares about Jewish people or antisemitism,” said Dena Robinson, a Jewish and Black former senior trial attorney.