Thursday, July 2, 2026

Sarah Schwartz - As an Australian Jew who publicly supports... | Facebook

National Herald - As an Australian Jew who publicly supports... | Facebook

As an Australian Jew who publicly supports Palestinian freedom, I’m targeted by my own community – and neo-Nazis
(Sarah Schwartz, The Guardian)
Jews should be able to criticise the actions of Israel without risking exclusion from communal life
As a teenager, I walked through concentration camps in Poland, where the Nazis industrialised the murder of European Jewry. That history has shaped not only my Jewish identity, but a commitment to political struggle. It taught me that memory carries not only grief, but obligations: to resist racism, dehumanisation and the silence that permits the erasure of a people.
Today, I’m giving evidence to the royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion, established after the slaughter of 15 people at a Hanukah celebration at Bondi beach. Their murders demand an honest reckoning. The question is whether we can confront antisemitism without weaponising Jewish grief or turning Holocaust memory into a political instrument to silence the very forms of solidarity and dissent it should compel.
Over the past two years, as a Jewish person publicly supporting Palestinian freedom, Israel’s defenders have repeatedly turned symbols of Jewish persecution against me. Online, I am called a “Kapo” and “Judenrat”, invoking the institutions the Nazis created to make Jews complicit in their own persecution. Those who claim to be the inheritors of the Holocaust circulate memes depicting me as a rat, pin yellow stars on my clothing, place me on a train to concentration camps and describe me as “Hitler’s Jew”. During a live ABC interview, another Jewish guest declared that I was “an anti-Jew”. Afterwards, a publication launched a “debate” about whether that description was justified, as though my Jewishness itself had become a matter for public adjudication.
“There is something profoundly disorienting about being compared to Nazis”
At the same time, I’m a target of actual neo-Nazis. They traffic in conspiracies such as the “Great Replacement”, portraying Jews as the hidden force behind multiculturalism, migration and anti-racism. They recycle familiar caricatures of Jewish appearance and Jewish power that have animated antisemitism for generations. They are indifferent to my views on Israel. They target me because I am publicly Jewish, and because I stand with those they imagine to be the enemies of a white Christian nation: Muslim people, migrants and anti-racists.
There is something profoundly disorienting about being compared to Nazis. I understand why people reach for this language. For many Jews, the Holocaust is the deepest moral reference point. It is the vocabulary through which fear, vulnerability and collective memory are expressed. But the language directed at me is not simply an expression of grief or lateral violence. It is part of a political framework cultivated over decades: one that collapses Jewish identity into the state of Israel, recasts criticism of Israel as hostility towards Jews, and turns the Holocaust from a warning against atrocity into a test of political loyalty. Israel becomes the “persecuted collective Jew”. Its critics become antisemites.
Last week, a UN commission of inquiry concluded that Israel has continued to commit genocide through the deliberate targeting of Palestinian children in Gaza. It found that Israeli forces deliberately shot at children’s vital organs, used high-payload munitions in densely populated areas, and that starvation caused by Israel’s blockade had inflicted profound and lasting harm.
Rather than engaging with these findings, Israeli officials again reached for the language of historic Jewish persecution. They dismissed the report as part of an “anti-Israel narrative” and accused those sharing its findings of “parroting blood libels”, invoking one of history’s oldest antisemitic myths. The allegations themselves became the persecution. The question ceased to be what had happened in Gaza, but whether those describing it were the latest antisemites.
This framework has travelled well. Australia’s debate has become almost entirely disconnected from Gaza itself. We argue about protesters, slogans, university encampments and definitions of antisemitism. Universities adopt managerial policies to mitigate “controversy”. Regulators adopt contested definitions which chill speech. Journalists learn which stories attract organised campaigns.
For Palestinians, the result is global silence; turning evidence of mass atrocity into a debate about permissible speech. For Jews, it flattens our identities into allegiance to a nation-state. Jews who refuse that allegiance must be cast out. My attempted public humiliation tells Jews that our place in communal and public life is conditional on political conformity.
Over the past two years I have spoken to countless Jewish people who feel unable to express their political convictions without risking public exposure, family rupture or exclusion from communal life. After I was publicly described as an “anti-Jew”, one wrote: “Growing numbers of Jews are feeling excluded and betrayed by communal institutions because of their political convictions.”
No government or institution can or should decide the boundaries of Jewish identity. But they can stop reinforcing the fiction that Jews and Israel are interchangeable.
When the Holocaust is used to police Jewish identity, silence those who bear witness to atrocity, or to recast allegations of mass violence as acts of persecution against the accused, it is hollowed of any moral force.
Instead its memory should be not only about what we inherit, but what we choose to do with that inheritance.
Sarah Schwartz is a human rights lawyer and executive director of the Jewish Council of Australia
Image - ‘Over the past two years I have spoken to countless Jewish people who feel unable to express their political convictions without risking public exposure or family rupture,’ writes human rights lawyer Sarah Schwartz.

Photograph: Mark Kerrison/In Pictures/Getty Images







Well done Sarah Swartz. 👍
It is important that people learn the difference between Zionism, Israel and Judaism.
It is very obvious that people also do not understand what a Semite is. Zionists and European Jews are corrupting the meaning of Semite.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semitic_people
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  • Sarah Swartz is an extraordinary person, as are other members of the Jewish Council of Australia, who have bravely spoken out against the genocide the Israeli govt is committing against Palestinians in Gaza. I implore other Jewish Australians, who have so far remained silent, to speak out in support - this is how we can tackle the major cause of anti-semitism in this country.
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  • Thank you Sarah for bringing a balanced perspective. The Jewish people opposing this genocide are the bravest people of all.
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  • Stand strong. This is about humanity, legality and justice not about being Jewish.
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  • Thank you Sarah. You speak for millions.
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  • Superb article which clearly separates the religion, culture from the present behaviours. Thankyou for your clarity and your ability to express what so many quiet people now feel.
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  • Sarah has my respect she obviously stands for human values
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  • 🙏🏼thank you for speaking out. Stay strong
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  • Thank you Sarah Swartz. More dialogue about this atrocity needs to be aired. Keep telling all those who try to silence this discussion to flip the blame to those who perpetrate hatred, ethnic cleansing and this abhorrent genocide instead of targeting honest people.
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  • Good on you Sarah. I admire your courage.👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
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  • Sarah Schwartz, I wish there are more Jewish people like you— sincere and not afraid to speak the truth.
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  • You are a courageous good person Sarah Schwartz ✊ Your words and strength matter so much in this dystopian time. Thank you ❤️🖤🤍💚🙏
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  • Good and loving God bless you Sarah Schwartz ❤️💐
    May be an image of text that says "Sarah Schwartz "A very brave, beautiful and courageous lady with integrity.""
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  • Never again means never again for everyone.
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  • Can Jews be accused of being Antisemitic…?
    Not sure if that’s possible…
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  • Wonderful woman
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  • You've got a ton of support from regular Australians. Thank you for your moral courage. But where are the rest of our politicians who should be standing up to Israel with you???
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  • Total respect
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  • Well said and thank you for speaking up!
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  • I am very sorry for your experience. It is also appalling how captured state and federal governments are captured by the Zionist money, creating laws that seek to silence our voice about the horror that today is Palestine
    Thank you for your post. While you speak for the plight of dissenting Jewish people, you also speak for many of us
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  • Sarah 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼
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  • Thank you for speaking out Sarah.
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  • Thank you for sharing...now can you, maybe just a little, understand how a Palestinian may feel under the weight of Zionist actions????
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  • Well said
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  • God bless Israel 🇮🇱❤️
    The ancestral home of the Jewish people
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  • Take care
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  • Brave
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  • Sarah you are amazing, you have brought Zionism to the attention of all Australians, THANKYOU
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  • The group most responsible for destroying “social cohesion” in Australia is obviously Zionist Jews. They attempt to suppress opposing voices eg those supporting a Palestinian unlawfully sacked by the ABC (a tame lapdog at best) and others excluded from writers festivals. In John Lyons’ book he criticises Zionist Australians trying to prevent the news he supplied about Israeli discrimination against Palestinians.
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  • Good on you Sarah. It gives nobody any pleasure seeing the persecuted become the persecutors.
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  • Well said Sarah. Thanks for taking a brace stand.
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  • May be a black-and-white image of text that says "My mother Survived the Holocaust. BUT Died ashamed of Israel's in her, actionsinher,. herJows NGARNST actions Jews EWAR name. HOLOCAUSI SURVIVOR DESCENDANT AGAINST GAZA GAZAGENOCIDE GENOCIDE"
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    ....milk it luv....max publicity and fame....nothing like the adrenaline rush and there is no way back now...
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  • May be an image of text that says "MAY IRANIANS, WHO MOSTLY HATE THEIR LEADERS, BE SAFE. MAY PALESTINIANS. WHO MOSTLY HATE THEIR LEADERS, BE SAFE. MAY ISRAELIS, WHO MOSTLY HATE THEIR LEADERS, BE SAFE. MAY U.S. CITIZENS. WHO MOSTLY HATE THEIR LEADERS, BE SAFE. MAY ALL THE WAR-MONGERING AUTHORITARIANS BE DEPOSED, AND MAY THEY ONE DAY EXPERIENCE REAL JUSTICE FOR ALL THE SUFFERING AND DEATH THEY CAUSE. RABBI MARISA JAMES (adapted)"
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  • Perhaps if the Israeli Defence Force did not plaster the Star of David all over its uniforms and killing machines, people wouldn’t confuse genocide with Judaism?
    May be an image of text
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  • a truly fantastic post
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  • Brave people
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    Royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion

    Conflation of Jewish identity with Israel driving antisemitism, Jewish Council says in submission to royal commission

    Progressive Jewish group calls for more focus on the threat from the far right and the recognition of a diversity of views within the community

    Tory ShepherdFri 19 Jun 2026





    Far-right extremism and the conflation of Jewish identity with Israel are the main drivers of antisemitism in Australia, the Jewish Council of Australia (JCA) says.

    In its submission to the royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion, the liberal Jewish group calls for more focus on the “often overlooked” threat from the far right, and recognition of the diversity of views within the Jewish community instead of the “tendency to treat Jews collectively as representatives of Israel”.


    In the submission, which the JCA made public this week, executive officer Sarah Schwartz says the “resurgent Australian far-right is a hotbed of antisemitism even as it weaponises Jewish grief to legitimise attacks on migrant communities and religious minorities”.

    The submission says two important drivers of antisemitism are the “growth of far-right, neo-Nazi and conspiracist movements, which represent a significant and often overlooked threat to Jewish communities, and the aggressive actions of the state of Israel and conflation of Jewish identity with Israel”.

    That is “a conflation that the state of Israel itself has long cultivated and which causes direct harm to Jewish people worldwide when they are blamed for Israel’s actions”, the submission says.


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    When you first heard me speak against this genocide, you heard my words as betrayal. But they were meant as love
    This article is more than 8 months old
    Sarah Schwartz





    Not speaking would go against everything I was taught to honour: the righteous among the nations – those who refused to be bystanders to injustice
    Wed 8 Oct 2025 14.57 AEDT
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    To those I have lost – the teachers, mentors, loved ones – who once taught me what it was to be Jewish. Those who once shared my table, yet now sit on the other side of a deep chasm.

    I write with hesitation. My words have been twisted before. But silence has become its own wound.

    We grew up in a world where support for Israel was assumed. Debate existed, but only within narrow confines. The state’s rightness, its necessity – these were never to be questioned.

    At 16, after visiting concentration camps in Poland, I went to Israel for the first time. I remember the shock of beauty, the sense of belonging. I believed the story: that our survival required this refuge. Here was the guarantee of Never Again.

    I did not dare to ask who had lived in the houses before 1948, who had planted the olive trees that grew by the roadside, who was being kept out by the guns and the barbed wire. I couldn’t – or maybe I refused to – imagine that the land beneath my feet was also Palestine.

    But you also taught me to wrestle. To argue. To resist. You taught me about the righteous among the nations – those who went against the grain, who fought fascism within their own communities, who refused to be bystanders to injustice.

    People participating in the Yizkor ritual for Yom Kippur – the holiest day in the Jewish calendar – block the Brooklyn Bridge on 2 October 2025 to protest against Israel’s military action in Gaza. Photograph: Adam Gray/Reuters

    So when I saw soldiers demolishing homes, imprisoning children, firing on protesters marching towards the border – and when I learned of the Nakba, the dispossession, massacres and theft – I could no longer cover my ears. How could I oppose dispossession here but defend it there? How could I denounce apartheid in South Africa and ignore it when it wore the Star of David?

    Yet when I asked about the walls, the occupation, the bullets, my loyalty was questioned. So I chose what seemed easier: not to wrestle.

    But that silence was a betrayal. It robbed us of the chance to begin hard conversations when they might still have been heard. Maybe it would not have changed anything. But maybe it meant that when you first heard me speak publicly – against this genocide – you heard my words as betrayal when they were meant as love.

    I wish I had told you, before our dinners grew cold, that one day I would speak loudly. Not to wound, but because not speaking would betray everything I was taught to honour.

    Because for me, love is not blind loyalty – to an ideology, a state or even a community. Love is to be whole and honest, not fragmented. It struggles and wrestles. Perhaps it refuses to let go.

    I have spoken not in spite of my Jewishness but because of it – in solidarity with Palestinians, but also out of love for you.

    Zionism – anchoring our survival to a nation-state built on another people’s dispossession – has not brought us safety. October 7 was a painful reminder that no one can be secure while others live under siege.

    The very act of oppressing others has changed us as a people. Our boots may be on their necks, but those same boots also shackle our feet.

    And so I can no longer separate our relationships from this struggle; it threads through the fabric of my life, pulling at every seam. Yet with every loss, new connections form. The glares of some are met by embraces from others. Some loved ones slowly and then quickly change, even though it costs them dearly, carried forward by love’s stubborn tide. This moment reveals that we were never singular. We were always fractured, questioning, complex – that was our strength. The danger was never difference; the danger was the oppression that demanded silence, that forbade questions, until even love could no longer be spoken.

    Jewish peace activists rally against the war in Gaza in New York on 4 August 2025. Photograph: Lev Radin/Shutterstock

    I now build within a new Jewish community – one which sees Judaism as diaspora and solidarity, not unquestioning support for a state. One that resists the conscription of our symbols into violence, the twisting of our history into justification for murder. One that sees Never Again as a promise, not a threat.

    But as we build here, questions remain. Do we keep wrestling with the institutions that are complicit, that have betrayed us, or build new ones beyond their walls? And if we build outside, what of our families already split? The siblings who no longer call, the Shabbat tables with empty chairs? What of our younger selves at the tables we have vacated, who without us may never hear another view? What of those of us who love people on the other side of the chasm?

    I’m told my words would frighten others at your table. Perhaps they would. But I am scared too – of returning and finding only silence, of being unable to speak, or worse, finding it easy not to. I am scared of not being able to look you in the eye.

    So we are left with words that hover like ghosts between us. They are love and grief and betrayal – the words I wish I’d said, the words I still cannot say.

    And I don’t know if they are words of wrestling, or words of farewell.