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Bondi Beach attack transforms global Hanukkah celebrations into acts of defiance — with added security
(JTA) — Within hours of a devastating shooting on a Chabad Hanukkah party in Australia, other outposts of the Hasidic movement began outlining their plans to go forward with their own celebrations, despite their grief and the possible risk.
“Chanukah teaches that we do not respond to darkness by retreating,” said Rabbi Mendel Silberstein of Chabad Lubavitch of Larchmont and Mamaroneck, in suburban New York City, in one statement among many issued by Chabad emissaries.
“We respond by adding light,” he continued. “Today is not a time to stay home or stay silent. It is a time to come out, stand tall, and show support for our brothers and sisters in Australia and for Jews everywhere.”
Rabbi Avi Winner, a spokesman for Chabad World Headquarters and the leader of Chabad Young Professionals in Manhattan, said public menorah lightings across the globe hosted by Chabad were seeing a surge in attendance, with some lightings “doubling in size” because of the Bondi Beach shooting.
“The only response is to not cower, but to double down and stand up for who we are and let the menorah shine bright,” Winner said.
The attack on the event organized by Chabad of Bondi is renewing attention to the public menorah-lightings that are a trademark of Chabad’s presence around the world, as urged by the movement’s last leader, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Menorahs have been erected by the movement in about 15,000 different locations annually in recent years, with many of them hosting daily gatherings to add a new candle.
The menorahs make Chabad one of the the most visible purveyors of Judaism during Hanukkah. Their presence in public spaces also make gatherings convened around them vulnerable targets for those seeking to carry out antisemitic attacks.
The Bondi Beach celebration was staffed with both city and private security officers, according to local accounts, but it took place in an exposed public location that would be difficult to protect from all attacks. The attackers shot with powerful weapons from some distance away.
Rabbi Mendy Kotlarsky, the executive director of Merkos 302 at Chabad World Headquarters, a division that supports the movement’s expansion, said in an interview that Chabad’s security office had sent out a “high-alert email with recommendations and guidelines” following the attack on Bondi Beach.
He said that while some Chabads had altered their plans following the attack, the predominating sentiment was that it was important to press ahead with the festivities.
“There are certain changes that have been made to different events, some of them going indoors, some of them just rearranging to more secure places,” Kotlarsky said. “But by and large the consensus and the approach is that we cannot allow these people to win. They’re trying to put out the Jewish flame.”
The attack at Bondi Beach comes as Jewish institutions around the world have shored up their security practices amid surging antisemitism across much of the world following Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel and the subsequent Israel-Hamas war in Gaza.
Many have pulled back from publicly announcing the locations of their public events, making the details available only to registrants or people affiliated with Jewish organizations.
After a deadly shooting at the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., in May and an attack on Israeli hostage solidarity demonstrators in Boulder, Colorado, in June, Jewish security agencies urged institutions to pay more attention to securing the perimeter of their events, ensuring that a determined attacker could not wage an assault from afar.
Several U.S. Jewish groups — the Jewish Federations of North America, the Anti-Defamation League, Secure Community Network, Community Security Service and Community Security Initiative of New York — reiterated that recommendation among others in a list issued on Sunday. They also urged increased coordination with local law enforcement, opening events only to identifiable individuals and providing details about events only to those who have registered in advance.
Expressing concern about copycat attacks, Israel’s National Security Council issued guidelines for Israelis abroad to steer clear of public events entirely in the wake of the Bondi Beach attack.
“It is strongly recommended to avoid unsecured public events, including events at synagogues, Chabad houses, Hanukkah parties, etc,” the guidance read.
The warning added to others issued recently about risks during the Hanukkah season. On Friday, the Security Community Network issued a threat assessment that warned that large public gatherings were at risk of being targeted by lone offenders, citing attacks on Christmas markets in Europe as well as the recent antisemitic attacks on public gatherings.
Michael Masters, the group’s national director and CEO, said in an interview that his organization was “encouraging” Jewish groups to go forward with Hanukkah events “with prudent security measures in place.”
“There’s absolutely a way to have a safe, secure outdoor event,” he said. “But you need to make sure that you’ve identified a perimeter, that you have proper security that has been identified with the security professional and law enforcement around that perimeter, and that you then think through containing or controlling access to the event that the best that you can.”
Moment of silence at the start of the annual lighting ceremony of the National Menorah on The Ellipse outside the White House by Rabbi @shemtovdc.
“The darkness that came over .. across the greater Jewish community.. will be answered with strength, light .. and with resilience.” pic.twitter.com/QbRzUI01sR
— Jacob N. Kornbluh (@jacobkornbluh) December 14, 2025
Despite reports of increased turnouts at Hanukkah events from Chabad officials, Masters said the larger crowds “did not necessitate new security concerns” — only careful attention to ongoing ones. He said he himself was planning to attend a public Chabad event Sunday evening in Chicago.
Rabbis from other denominations also urged their congregants and followers to rededicate themselves to lighting Hanukkah candles as a response to the Sydney attack, in keeping with the holiday’s commandment to “publicize the miracle,” historically understood as requiring Hanukkah candles to be made visible from beyond one’s home.
Rabbi Menachem Creditor, a scholar in residence and rabbi for the UJA-Federation of New York whose brother-in-law was shot in the Sydney attack, called for Jews to light the menorah in a post on Facebook, calling that act a “Sacred Protest in the Shadow of Bondi Beach.”
“Tonight, as we stand trembling and furious and heartbroken, the temptation to retreat inward is real. But that is not the Jewish way. The Chanukah lights were never meant to be hidden,” Creditor wrote. “We awaken to light, again and again, knowing that every illumination is an act of spiritual resistance. We choose joy not as denial, but as defiance. We affirm life not because it is easy, but because it is commanded.”
Police departments in major cities emphasized that they would be deploying forces to support Hanukkah festivities.
“While there is currently no specific or credible threat to Hanukkah celebrations here, the NYPD will be out in full force at events and synagogues so that our communities can gather safely,” New York City’s police department said in a statement.
Chabad was promoting 25 public Hanukkah celebrations in Manhattan alone, some at public sites such as skating rinks.
Back in the suburbs of New York, Silberstein said in an interview that his Chabad had planned a “Hanukkah walk,” where local residents would visit different businesses in downtown Larchmont and meet for a large public menorah lighting.
In light of the attack in Sydney, Silberstein said he had called local police to ensure that they would have a “strong presence” at the event.
“There’ll be two changes. One, there’ll be very much beefed-up security, but on the other hand, I expect hundreds of more people to come out in solidarity of our brothers and sisters,” he said. “When one part of the Jewish nation gets hit, it hits everyone deep.”
The post Bondi Beach attack transforms global Hanukkah celebrations into acts of defiance — with added security appeared first on The Forward.
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Dutch Police Arrest 22 After Anti-Israel Protests, Vandalism at Amsterdam Venue During IDF Cantor Performance
Anti-Israel protesters clash with police outside Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw, breaking through barricades and setting off smoke bombs during a demonstration against a performance by the IDF’s chief cantor. Photo: Screenshot
Dutch police arrested 22 people on Sunday after anti-Israel protests outside an Amsterdam concert hall erupted into violent clashes during a performance by the Israel Defense Forces’ official cantor.
Around 200 demonstrators gathered outside Amsterdam’s famed Concertgebouw to protest a performance by Shai Abramson, the IDF’s chief cantor, who has previously performed at several Israeli military ceremonies.
Even though Abramson was originally scheduled to lead the Concertgebouw’s annual public Hanukkah concert, the venue canceled his appearance last month following backlash over his ties to the Israeli military.
After the announcement sparked international outrage, the Concertgebouw offered Abramson the chance to perform at two private concerts later that evening while skipping the main Sunday afternoon concert.
Widely circulated on social media, footage showed anti-Israel protesters chanting antisemitic slogans, breaking through barricades, and carrying signs with inverted red triangles — a symbol used in Hamas propaganda to mark targets.
“October 7, 2023: The day indigenous people rose up against their occupier,” one of the signs read, referring to the Hamas-led invasion of and massacre across southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Paar demonstranten gooiden een hek om. Paar agenten van de arrestatie-eenheid hebben ze met hulp van de ME uit de groep gehaald. Dat ging er hardhandig aan toe pic.twitter.com/dxtxPg1jsQ
— Jesper Roele (@JesperRoele) December 14, 2025
As riot police worked to contain the crowd and maintain public order, protesters set off smoke bombs, leaving one officer with minor injuries, Dutch News reported.
Local law enforcement arrested 22 people for offenses including violating assembly rules, possessing fireworks, and resisting arrest.
Het was een orgie van Jodenhaat, vandaag op het Museumplein en vlak voor de ingang van het #Concertgebouw, waar Holocaustoverlevenden werden uitgescholden voor nazi’s. Met instemming van een tokkie in toga.
Dit is racisme, dit zijn de nieuwe nazi’s, dit is het pure Kwaad. pic.twitter.com/Ho8DC9dQ4y— Bart Schut (@bpschut) December 14, 2025
On Monday, the anti-Israel group Pal Action NL claimed responsibility for vandalism at the concert hall, sharing photos on its Instagram account showing red paint splattered across the walls.
“Last night, after Het Concertgebouw allowed IOF war criminal and official cantor of the Zionist settler colony, Shai Abramson, to perform, some activists decided to pay a little visit,” the group wrote in its post.
“Het Concertgebouw now has Palestinian blood on their hands, and it will take a LONG time to wash away …” the statement read. “A warning to all other venues and institutions in the country considering platforming Zionists, don’t. Or we will be visiting.”
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Antisemitism Threatens US National Security, Analysts Warn
From left to right: Hudson Institute senior fellow Michael Scott Doran, Hudson Ravenel B. Curry III Distinguished Fellow in Strategy and Statesmanship Walter Russell Mead, and Hudson trustees chair Sarah Stern. Photo: Screenshot.
Geopolitical competition, the rise of artificial intelligence, and declining faith in the capitalist economic model and liberal democracy are contributing to the resurgence of antisemitism taking place across the Western world, some of the leading foreign policy experts in the US said on Friday during a conference held by the Hudson Institute in Washington, DC.
Titled, “Antisemitism as a National Security Threat,” the eight-hour event examined antisemitism as a challenge to the execution of a sound American foreign policy and a tactical advantage to “revisionist powers” such as China and Russia which aim to overturn the international order and supplant the US as the world’s leading superpower. Moreover, they stressed that the vanguard of the “new” antisemitism – Candace Owens, Tucker Carlson, and Nick Fuentes – are not new characters on the world stage but rather the latest iteration of a social type which has always emerged in periods of disruptive change to convert public uncertainty about the future into domestic upheaval.
One area that antisemites have identified as a stronghold is the rising field of artificial intelligence, Jude Rosenblatt, founder of an AI consulting firm, told attendees while appearing via webcam.
“The AI, unfortunately is quite antisemitic itself. We’ve done a lot of research about this. I can explain it in greater detail if you want, but it turns out that AI is very antisemitic and then when it undergoes safety training, it actually becomes more antisemitic. And it is very concerning that underneath the hood, AI is deeply antisemitic,” Rosenblatt explained. “But if it remains deeply antisemitic underneath the hood, then it’s going to, as it becomes more deeply incorporated into everything, people are going to increasingly lose agency to something which is antisemitic and is going to undermine all of our interests.”
The Algemeiner has reported extensively in recent weeks on how neo-Nazis, jihadi terrorists, and others have weaponized AI both to target the Jewish people and, more broadly, expand their propaganda, recruitment, and operations.
The conference also touched on the rise of the so-called “new right.” From the advent of the Cold War until the election of Donald Trump, the American right or “conservative movement” was associated with a “strong” and “active” American foreign policy consensus rooted in a pragmatic assessment of the national interest even as it often embraced a missionary project of spreading liberal democracy and capitalism around the world.
Recently, however, right-wing social media pundits such as Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes have argued for America’s retreating from the world stage by citing, implicitly and explicitly, antisemitic conspiracies which claim that Jews incite wars and social upheaval for profit and the pursuit of power. In doing so, they have uttered torrid encomiums to the leaders and governments of China, Russia, Venezuela, and Iran.
The lies and historical revisionism the new right promotes is poisoning public debate and creating a climate in which American leaders are incentivized to make poor strategic decisions for the sake of achieving short term political goals, according to experts.
“It started off with anti-Ukraine in the populist world,” Hudson Institute senior fellow and director of the Keystone Defense Initiative, Rebecca Heinrichs, said, speaking during a panel titled “The Grand Chessboard.”
“It’s antisemitism for the purpose of undermining Americans’ confidence in ourselves and in our post World War II role in the world. That is very dangerous because we can’t come to consensus on anything else we need from a grand strategy perspective if American scapegoat our problems to the Jews and if they believe that Israel is no longer an ally but it never was, and in fact that we were on the wrong side of World War II, which is now the narrative being pushed,” she continued.
The conference ended with a keynote address delivered by renowned scholar and foreign policy analyst Walter Russell Mead. An alumnus of Yale University, Mead’s most recent work includes his critically acclaimed examination of the US-Israel relationship titled, The Arc of the Covenant: The United States, Israel, and the Fate of the Jewish People.
Mead discussed antisemitism across the ages as one consequence of utopian social engineering and its perennial quest to construct societies unalloyed by outsiders and nonbelievers.
“When you want to have a comprehensive political order that embodies all good things and lays out rules for how everyone should behave and think and so on, you sooner or later run up against those stubborn Jews who will not bend to the need of Baal, who will not sacrifice to the emperor or whatever the element of the coercive element of your utopia is,” Mead said. “Today in the Islamist Middle East, we see the same thing, a utopia. If everyone would just accept Islam and live in the light of these eternal truths, everything would be fine. There would be justice, there would be prosperity, there would be freedom. But there are Jews.”
He continued, “The European union’s vision of a world of peace in international order keeps getting disturbed by that traumatizing presence of a Jewish state that follows the logic of its own survival rather than the idealistic hopes and dreams that we see in Brussels.”
Mead concluded by arguing that the American tradition offers not only a guide for building a society which, while being imperfect, is inclusive to all but also an antidote to antisemitism.
“Other people reject the American idea of a free society in favor of some kind of a blood and soil nationalism. Again, you’re just not going to get there because it’s kind of obvious that we’re sort of diverse. We’ve got a bunch of people from whose blood and whose soil is it going to be there?” he said.
Follow Dion J. Pierre @DionJPierre.
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Tucker Carlson’s Brother Suggests Australia Terror Attack Was a False Flag Operation, Mocks Victim
Tucker Carlson speaks at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, Oct. 21, 2025. Photo: Gage Skidmore/ZUMA Press Wire via Reuters Connect
The brother of prominent right-wing pundit Tucker Carlson suggested on social media that Sunday’s terrorist attack that killed 15 people at a Jewish celebration in Australia was a false flag operation, mocking one of the more than 40 others who were injured during the mass shooting.
Two gunmen opened fire on the crowd gathering at Bondi Beach in Sydney to celebrate the first night of the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah, murdering a child, a rabbi, and a Holocaust survivor among a dozen other civilians.
Buckley Carlson took to social media to comment on the antisemitic massacre, insinuating that victim’s injuries were faked and key details were fabricated. He reposed a comment which claimed that “Zionist networks and intelligence staged shooting incidents,” described the attack in Syndey as “theater,” and argued and that the terrorism will become pretext for new speech restrictions regarding antisemitism. The reposted comment also suggested that human rights attorney Arsen Ostrovsky, who was shot in the head during the attack, fabricated his injuries for attention.
“When your ego betrays the Op,” Carlson posted. “‘Get out of the frame, Arsen!’”
“You really are a sick person,” Ostrovsky wrote back.
Carlson retorted, raising additional doubts regarding the legitimacy of the terrorist attack.
When your ego betrays the Op. “Get out of the frame, Arsen!” https://t.co/3w9wQuHi3F
— Buckley Carlson (@buckleycarlson) December 14, 2025
Let’s just condemn the lying, James. pic.twitter.com/pvFaozuSbe
— Buckley Carlson (@buckleycarlson) December 14, 2025
Within hours of the shooting, a wave of misinformation spread across fringe forums as well as major platforms such as X and Facebook. Online antisemitism monitors documented a surge in baseless accusations aimed at obscuring the reality of the attack, including claims that the event was staged or orchestrated by intelligence services. Misinformation experts have warned that false flag allegations, claims that real-world violent events are staged by governments or intelligence agencies, often proliferate after high-profile tragedies.
Carlson’s brother, Tucker, has sparked controversy over the past two years for spreading a relentless barrage of anti-Israel and antisemitic conspiracies on his popular podcast. Carlson, a former Fox News host who now hosts a podcast, has questioned Hamas’s status as a terrorist group and hosted guests who have minimized historical atrocities, including the Holocaust, without pushing back against their claims. He has falsely and repeatedly accused Israel of committing a “genocide” in Gaza, argued that the Jewish state oppresses Christians, and insinuated that Jews were responsible for killing Jesus.
Carlson has further suggested that Zionism is oppositional to “Western values” and that Israel’s policies are tantamount to “collective punishment.” The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), the official news agency of the state of Iran, has published articles highlighting Carlson’s comments.
Notably, during an appearance at a recent forum in Qatar, Carlson publicly announced that he would be purchasing a home in Doha. The announcement drew backlash, with critics pointing out that Hamas leaders live in Qatar and that the country regularly uses slave labor.
Carlson’s prominence within the US conservative movement has provoked significant alarm, with many right-leaning Jews concerned that his influence could lead to greater levels of antisemitism within the Republican Party. US Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) has called on his party to repudiate Carlson.
