
Attacks in Melbourne have struck fear into the Jewish community, and do nothing to bring about peace
While criminal charges have now been laid and the justice system must be allowed to take its course, to understand the impacts of these two separate events on Melbourne's Jewish community, you first must understand what Fridays mean to us.
It is the night where we welcome in Shabbat (the Sabbath), and the different expressions of how we do that are perfectly illustrated in both Miznon and the East Melbourne Hebrew Congregation.
Sitting on the edge of Melbourne's CBD, East Melbourne Synagogue is one of Melbourne's oldest and most established congregations, practising ceremonies reflective of the Orthodox Jewish religion. Only a short distance away is the Israeli restaurant Miznon. Despite their differences, both institutions of the Jewish community reflect what is most important to us on that day of the week: being together.
Last Friday night, as 20 members of the East Melbourne Synagogue community were gathered around the table for Shabbat dinner, police allege a man allegedly attempted to set the building they were in alight.
And at Miznon, a protest allegedly turned violent. Protesters reportedly targeted the restaurant because it is part-owned by Israeli restaurateur Shahar Segal, who has served as a spokesperson for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which has been widely condemned for how it distributes aid in Gaza. But I don't believe what allegedly unfolded at Miznon was a legitimate peaceful protest. Patrons and staff were allegedly harassed. Furniture was allegedly thrown.
Two separate incidents. Two very different spaces.
Targeting East Melbourne Synagogue strikes fear to all who feel connected to their culture, community and way of life. Many will recognise this antisemitism from the darkest times in Jewish memory.
But targeting Miznon also strikes fear for all who are proud of their culture, heritage, and background, and want to share it with their fellow Australians. It makes people question if their existence or where they were born diminishes their place in our country.
There must be a space for legitimate criticism of the Israeli government, to voice the need for Gazans to receive aid, to end hostilities and work towards a lasting peace. But we cannot accept that any of that is achieved by causing further division here in Melbourne.
Violence, pain and suffering is not a competition. And one of the most important things is to listen to different communities when they tell you what is impacting them.
It is not up to those outside the Jewish community to tell us what is and isn't antisemitism, or to define what makes us feel unsafe.
At the same time, we must learn that two things can be true at once:
That we can hold empathy for the unimaginable suffering of the Palestinian people, while caring for the safety of the Jewish community in Australia.
That we can wish for the safe return of hostages to their families in Israel, while seeing that the rise of Islamophobia here at home is true as well.
And in doing so, we must realise some things that are not true.
One of these things that is not true is that by expressing concern for rising antisemitism in Australia, you are endorsing violence in a conflict on the other side of the world.
The reality is if the Jewish community doesn't feel safe here in Australia, we are not the only ones.
Other communities are watching. They are seeing what is happening to the Jewish community when we call out what is happening to us.
Sign up to Breaking News Australia
Get the most important news as it breaks
after newsletter promotion
This is demonstrated to me daily when I receive private messages of solidarity and support from people who are afraid of assumptions and repercussions if they said as much publicly.
The government that I am a part of needs to be open to doing more, but we can't legislate away bigotry and hatred. Each of us have a responsibility to look at what's happening around us. And that starts with listening to affected communities.
When my office was firebombed in June last year, it was an incident that we thought was as far as escalations could go.
At the time I said I would have done it myself if it would bring peace to the Middle East. That point remains.
How we confront these issues in Australia matters, and it too often descends into the opposite of the future we desperately want to realise.
Despite the alleged attacks on the Jewish community, there are still places for us to find hope. And this was demonstrated by the response of the staff from Max, the Lebanese owned restaurant neighbouring Miznon on Friday night.
Standing in the doorway, it was the staff of Max, who stood in front of Miznon and copped the brunt of the alleged abuse, hurling of tomatoes and the alleged smashing of the shop windows.
Because for those of us who come from multicultural and multifaith communities, we know that an attack on one of us is an attack on all of us.
And that the future should be one of respect, togetherness and sharing food, especially on a Friday night.
Josh Burns is the federal member for Macnamara
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
36 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘Sheer luck': how German backpacker Carolina Wilga was found after 11 nights lost in dense Australian outback
German backpacker Carolina Wilga spent 11 freezing nights lost in the Australian outback, convinced she would never be found. By 'sheer luck' the confused and disoriented 26-year-old came across a road, where she flagged down a woman in a passing car on Friday afternoon. An 'exhausted, dehydrated and hungry' Wilga has spoken to her family, had a good night's sleep, a shower and some food, WA police Acting Det Insp Jessica Securo said on Saturday. 'This is the best result we could have hoped for,' she said. 'We're incredibly grateful that she's been found safe, and obviously this is a huge relief for her family and all of her loved ones. 'We never gave up hope that Carolina would be found safe and well … the support of our WA community is our greatest asset, particularly in a state as vast as ours. 'It's sheer luck. The area out there is mixed terrain. It can be quite dangerous if you don't know what you're doing or where you're going, and it's very easy to get lost.' WA Police confirmed on Friday night that Wilga had been found 'safe and well'. She had been 'ravaged' by mosquitoes, was dehydrated, exhausted, starving and had minor injuries including cuts and bruises, and was airlifted to a Perth hospital. The temperature in the area had dropped down to 0C at night and there was heavy rain. On 29 June, Wilga had visited a shop in Beacon, a small town about 300km northeast of Perth. Her family and friends had not heard from her since, and raised the alarm. Police and volunteers started searching the remote wheatbelt area and beyond. Wilga's Mitsubishi van was found bogged and abandoned in Karroun Hill, about 150km from Beacon, on Thursday. Securo said Wilga had 'somewhat lost control of the vehicle', which had then become 'mechanically unsound and bogged'. She had stayed with the car for just a day before panicking and striking out to find help, Securo said, and had used the sun's position to head west. She had minimal food and water. 'She is still in disbelief that she was able to survive,' Securo said. 'In her mind, she had convinced herself that she was not going to be located … I'm sure she got to a point where she thought no one was coming.' Wilga was found about 24km from her car. Securo said Wilga was 'very traumatised' and 'just overwhelmed' to have been found, and that the woman who found her was 'quite overwhelmed herself'. 'We are extremely thankful for her stopping and giving Carolina assistance,' she said. Wilga had planned to explore WA then head north and towards the east coast, Securo said, and still plans to travel Australia, with the east coast 'on her bucket list'. 'As you can imagine, from the trauma she suffered for the last few days, she's been obviously through a great deal,' WA police's Insp Martin Glynn said on Friday. 'She does have some injuries. She's been ravaged by mosquitoes. She's obviously been through an amazing journey, a trauma, no doubt … [and] a testimony to demonstrating her bravery in those circumstances. 'There's a very hostile environment out there, both from flora and fauna. It's a really, really challenging environment.' WA premier Roger Cook said he was 'incredibly relieved' that she had been found alive. 'This news is nothing short of remarkable,' he wrote on Facebook. 'We're yet to have the full picture of what happened, but … we can all breathe a little easier knowing Carolina is safe and well.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Twist after professor was sacked for sending text messages, poems and a photo of himself in his boxers to PhD student at Melbourne University
A professor who sent his PhD student a string of romantic messages and a photo of himself in his boxer shorts has won his job back after being sacked by the university. University of Melbourne Professor of Geotechnical Engineering Stephan Matthai, now 62, was dumped by the university in December 2024. He was sacked after it emerged he had sent a female PhD student a string of romantic messages and a suggestive photo of himself back in 2017. Prof Matthai, who moved to Melbourne from Germany for a senior academic post, was found to have engaged in misconduct by the Fair Work Commission. However, the tribunal ruled that his termination was unreasonable given the university had known about the inappropriate conduct for years. Deputy President Alan Colman found the university's decision to fire Prof Matthai seven years after the fact was excessive. He pointed out the engineer had maintained a clean professional record ever since. 'If he had been dismissed at the time the misconduct occurred, when he was 55, he may have had more opportunities for re-employment,' Mr Colman said. The University of Melbourne has signalled it may appeal the decision. The matter traces back to 2017, when an unnamed PhD student who had received a scholarship to study in Melbourne started working under Prof Matthai's supervision. Their exchanges began as professional, but quickly became romantic. In a string of heartfelt messages, Matthai opened up about his recent break-up and responded to a poem from the student with one of his own. 'We are like the dry soil soaking up the autumn rain after a long hot summer. It is very beautiful and caresses our souls, but it should not give you pain. You know that I am barely coping with the separation from [omitted],' he wrote. Their exchanges moved to personal email and private video chats, with Matthai deliberately avoiding university channels to dodge detection from those he described as 'UoM internet security people'. 'It is our very own private conversation... and yes, we have the pleasure of getting a glimpse of this together and it is really beautiful reawakening,' he wrote. 'We share this on a deep intuitive level.' The pair messaged back-and-forth for two months, with Prof Matthai sending the student a picture of himself in his boxer shorts. The tribunal deemed the messages to be 'inappropriate and unprofessional' but not grounds for dismissal. Despite the university being informed of the messages in 2017, Matthai was allowed to continue in his role until his sudden dismissal in late 2024. The tribunal took particular issue with the university's delay in acting, stating that it had effectively condoned his continued employment. No further concerns arose during the following years. Matthai's legal win means he will be reinstated to his $226,000 position, but with the university now reviewing its next steps, his future remains uncertain.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Fate of Erin Patterson's $1.2million 'forever' home hangs in the balance
The $1.2million idyllic country property where Erin Patterson served the fateful mushroom lunch that killed three members of her family is now only an eerie reminder of one of Australia's most disturbing domestic murder cases. The two-storey weatherboard home, set on a hectare of land in Victoria's Gippsland region, was supposed to be the place Patterson would grow old. But it was inside that very home that Patterson dished up the deadly beef wellington laced with death cap mushrooms that killed her former in-laws Don and Gail Patterson, and Gail's sister Heather Wilkinson. Heather's husband, Reverend Ian Wilkinson, was the sole survivor of the lunch. At her highly-publicised trial, the 50-year-old was asked her plans for the house. 'I saw it as the final house,' she told the jury. 'Meaning I wanted it to be a house where the children would grow up, where once they moved away for uni or work, they could come back and stay whenever they liked, bring their children, and I'd grow old there. That's what I hoped.' Patterson reportedly bought the 1hectare block in 2019 for $260,000 after selling her parent's beachfront retirement home in Eden for $900,000. While Patterson still owns the Leongatha home, it is now burdened by a mortgage taken out to fund her mounting legal costs. Just weeks after she was charged with three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder in November 2023, Patterson sold her Mount Waverley investment unit for $1.025 million. Despite her conviction, questions remain about why her assets, including the Leongatha property, are yet to be frozen by authorities. Victims' families may yet seek compensation, but legal experts believe what remains of her estate will end up in a trust for her two children. Black tarps were erected around the Leongatha house in the lead-up to the verdict, shielding the front door, carport, and verandah from view. The thick plastic sheeting was reportedly installed by a supporter of Patterson's, possibly in anticipation of her return. But just days after the guilty verdict, the tarps were mysteriously removed. Patterson is being held at the maximum-security Dame Phyllis Frost Centre in Ravenhall, more than two hours away from her forever home. Prison sources say the convicted mushroom chef has been targeted by other inmates and was even separated last year over claims she tampered with prison food. Patterson is expected to be sentenced later this year.