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Bondi royal commission live updates: Jewish Australians share harrowing lived experiences of anti-Semitism

David Johns and Madeline CoveThe Nightly
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Sheina Gutnick, whose father died in the Bondi terror attack.
Camera IconSheina Gutnick, whose father died in the Bondi terror attack. Credit: Royal Commission on Antisemitism and Social Cohesion

Scroll down for the latest news and updates.

Key Events

‘We were preparing for a mass casualty event’
Holocaust survivor re-traumatised by Australian anti-Semitism
‘They cannot break your spirit’
Closing comments from Mr Halas
Jewish people ‘scaredd to come forward’: Halas
Anti-Semitism started to accelerate during COVID
Anthony Halas is called as next witness
Closing statement from Mr Halasz
Reaction to October 7 attack like a ‘physical blow’
Anti-Semitism didn’t disappear with the nazis: Halasz
Mr Raphael reveals Bondi trauma
‘Why do people want to put swastikas on the front of a synagogue?’
Mr Raphael describes shocking anti-Semitic assault at university
Rabbi Benjamin’s closing statement
Congregants don’t tell Uber drivers where they’re going: Rabbi Benjamin
Rabbi Benjamin describes series of verbal and physical assaults
How anti-Zionism becomes anti-Semitism
The way forward is education and consequences: Ryvchin
Lack of consequence normalises anti-Semitic behaviour: Ryvchin
Bondi ‘broke my heart’: Ryvchin
‘I knew sooner or later someone was going to be dead’: Ryvchin
Ryvchin describes discovering his former home had been targeted
Australian anti-Semitism is ‘soaring’: Ryvchin
We’re now hearing from Alex Ryvchin
‘I just want our children to feel safe’: Schwartz
How anti-Semitism impacted interfaith program
Impact of graffiti attack on Mount Sinai College
Jewish college president reveals extent of security measures
Ben describes normalisation of security at Jewish events
Ben shares experience of army reserve colleagues making anti-Semitic jokes
Ben shares horrific family bashing story
AAM says ‘devastated and depleted’ Jewish families are leaving Australia
AAM describes anti-Semitic attack on kids’ school
‘How did we get here?’
AAM describes terrifying night at Melbourne synagogue
AAL describes ‘disturbing and shocking’ school incident
AAL describes ‘mad chaos’ at Oct 9 protests
AAK says Australian Jews need others to listen to them
AAK describes ‘uncomfortable’ scenes at post-October 7 protest in Sydney
Jewish Australian ‘genuinely terrified’ by anti-Semitism
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Commission adjourned

Dr Engelman’s testimony has concluded.

That wraps up the hearing for the day.

‘We were preparing for a mass casualty event’

Dr Engelman is the co-founder of the Community Health Support Charity.

He says people were scared after the Bankstown hospital incident to go to public hospitals.

He also says the group was preparing for a mass casualty event post-October 7.

He says demand for emergency m,edical training has risen dramatically since December 14.

Holocaust survivor re-traumatised by Australian anti-Semitism

Dr Engelman says he never truly felt anti-Semitism until after the events of October 7.

“She saw hatred, she saw vitriol, she saw people attacking the Jewish people without any provocation,” he says.

She became concerrned about the welfare of the wider Jewish community, he says.

This re-traumatised his mother and provoked “many more sleepless nights”.

Yvonne Engelman’s son speaks

Dr Jeffrey Engelman is the final witness for the day.

He says his father was also a survivor of Auschwitz.

Dr Engelman says both his parents were “very proud Australians”.

They were both involved in the establishment of the Sydney Jewish Museum.

He says two weeks before his mother died, at the age of 97, she was still educating students about the holocaust.

‘They cannot break your spirit’

Mrs Engelman says she arrived at Auschwitz with her parents as a child and was “roughly” separated from her parents.

That was the last time she saw them. She found out later they were taken straight to the gas chambers.

The children were made to shave their heads and were also sent to the gas chambers.

But by a miracle, the gas wasn’t effective.

In the morning they were put to work.

She said the way the guards treated the victims was horrific.

“The hatred. You have no idea,” she says.

“They can do anything to you but they cannot break your spirit. They never succeeded to break my spirit.”

She says with the passage of time, she knows she is the victor. She survived and now has four generations of Australians to her name.

The late Yvonne Engleman.
Camera IconThe late Yvonne Engleman. Credit: Royal Commission on Antisemitism & Social Cohesion/Supplied

Holocaust survivor tells of devastating ordeal via video statement

The court is now seeing a video testimony from the late Yvonne Engelman.

She is a holocaust survivor telling her story.

Her son Jeffrey will be the last speaker for the day.

Closing comments from Mr Halas

Mr Halas says his greatest fear if the current trajectory continues is that if the country is not safe for his children or their children then “we will have to leave”.

He asked the royal commission to help fight for this outcome.

Jewish people ‘scaredd to come forward’: Halas

Mr Halas is the director of the Jewish Centre for Law and Justice.

He says that a lot of Jewish people are afraid to come forward to the royal commission.

He’s telling a story about a board member at a company he worked with complaining about being “sick of white Jewish power”.

The comments were made during a discussion about the October 7 attacks, when a staff member at the company was describing how they had impacted her family.

The board member resigned a few days later.

Anthony Halas.
Camera IconAnthony Halas. Credit: Royal Commission on Antisemitism & Social Cohesion/Supplied

Anti-Semitism started to accelerate during COVID

Mr Halas says he had a “wonderful childhood” and experienced very little anti-Semitism growing up.

He says he started to see anti-Semitism grow during COVID, when far right groups would circulate conspiracy theories that Israel was responsible for COVID.

He says on the left, he saw a new movement of “being a good person” being equated with opposing Israel.

Anthony Halas is called as next witness

Mr Halas is Peter Halasz’ son.

He says he has applied for his Hungarian citizenship as a “plan B” in case things “don’t improve” in Australia.

“Who would have thought that Hungary would be seen as a safe alternative,” he says.

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