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

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Jun 21, 2026, 3:57:48 PM (2 days ago) Jun 21
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The Guardian                                                                                                        19 June 2026 

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

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The executive officer of the Jewish Council of Australia, Sarah Schwartz. Schwartz has made a submission to the royal commission on antisemitism and social cohesion. Photograph: Con Chronis/AAP

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.

Over the course of the commission’s first block of public hearings in May, the commissioner, Virginia Bell, heard discussions of the blurred lines between antisemitism and legitimate criticism of Israel’s actions, as well as first-hand stories of antisemitic attacks, details of the policing on the day of the Bondi attack and discussions on the definition of antisemitism.

The debate over identification with Israel is multifaceted.

Other submissions have included statements from Australian Jews strongly identifying with the state, including from Daniel Aghion, the president of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, which has been critical of the views of the JCA and regards it as unrepresentative of the majority of Australian Jews.

Others have testified before the commission that Australian Jews should not be held responsible for Israel’s actions. Vic Alhadeff, the former chief executive of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies, told the commission: “Jewish Australians have no agency in what the Israel Defense Force does, or indeed what the Israeli government does. And yet so much of the manifestation of antisemitic incidents and attacks is interlaced with, and references, what is taking place on the other side of the world. We are not responsible.”

The government’s special envoy to combat antisemitism, Jillian Segal, told Bell conflation of the Israeli government with Jewish people was Australia’s “fastest-growing” form of antisemitism.

The commission has received more than 16,000 submissions, according to its website. Submissions are not being made public, but organisations and individuals are able to share their own submissions. Others that have done so include the president of the Zionist Federation of Australia, Jeremy Leibler, as well as Aghion and the JCA.

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