Would you like to add your name to the following open letter which will be published on the Jews4Humanity.com website and with the hope of being widely circulated?
If so, please fill in the boxes below.
Fellow Australian creatives and academics,
We, Jewish creatives, academics and allies, no matter where we stand on the
political spectrum, are heartbroken over the tragedy of the brutal massacre and
kidnappings of Israeli civilians perpetrated by Hamas terrorists in Israel on
October 7, and by the deaths and suffering of Palestinian civilians in Gaza as a consequence of Israel’s military response to these
attacks.
Our despair over the profound collective trauma being experienced by both peoples is
immeasurable.
At the same time, we are compelled to express our dismay and shock at the lack of public
understanding and empathy shown towards Jewish people by a considerable number
of peers and organisations within the Australian creative and academic circles,
which we associate with progressive values, since October 7. Some of us have
been approached with care and concern by our non-Jewish colleagues in private.
But in the public arena, as far as our industries are concerned, silence and
justifications often prevail.
The October 7 attacks constituted the most deplorable day of violence perpetrated
against Jewish people since the Holocaust. The vast majority of those murdered
were civilians – babies, small children, teenagers, pregnant women, the elderly, peace activists, Holocaust survivors. These fellow Jews were hunted down, in many instances raped and mutilated; in addition, over 220 were abducted to Gaza where they are subjected to subhuman treatment and remain under threat of execution by Hamas.
Public silence among many of our colleagues in the face of these atrocities can feel
not only deafening, but perilous; the kind of silence that leads to a discourse
of hate and, from there, violence. The message this silence sends is that understanding
and empathy are a zero-sum game: that if one’s ideological commitment is for legitimate Palestinian rights and an end to Israeli attacks on Gaza, then one cannot also extend sympathy for the Jewish victims of Hamas. The fact is, both peoples are suffering.
Worse, we are witnessing not only silence, perhaps even forgetting, but also attempts
to justify the unthinkable. Just recently, an open letter signed by many creatives
and academics was published in Overland. Addressed to the Federal Minister
for the Arts, it contained not a single word of condemnation for Hamas’s atrocities – no concern for the deaths of Israeli civilians or the suffering of hostages in Gaza. A reference was made to “armed attacks on October 7 by Palestinian people” that
“cannot be decontextualised from apartheid, extreme oppression …” This implied that
Hamas’s actions were a legitimate response to oppression in the Palestinian struggle
for selfhood. It was hard to avoid the subtext here: that the victims of the
October 7 massacres had it coming.
Sadly, this letter was not a one-off. There has been a growing discourse that the
victims themselves were to blame for their murders. This is not only antithetical to progressive values, but a conflation of Palestine’s right to
self-determination with the actions of Hamas.
This failure to acknowledge the October 7 attack as terrorism inflames further the already volatile climate of rapidly escalating antisemitism in Australia and around the world (for example, antisemitic
attacks have increased 650-fold in the UK since the Hamas attack).
The Australian Jewish community is small. We comprise approximately 114,000 people.
Jewish schools and other organisations are currently under heightened security,
while many Jews have even taken to concealing their identities in public. As
your Jewish friends and colleagues, we want you to know that since October 7 many
of us are feeling increasingly unsafe, even directly threatened, in our
workplaces and elsewhere.
Many Australian Jews have relatives and friends among the murdered, injured and
kidnapped in the October 7 massacre. Our grief does not diminish the pain we
feel for Palestinian civilians and their ongoing suffering. We extend our hearts to both peoples. And we know a significant number of you do the same.
We are calling on our fellow creatives and academics to show empathy for the
suffering of innocents on both sides of this hideously complex conflict. By
doing so you are not abandoning your progressive ideologies. Rather, you are
reinforcing them by affirming our collective humanity.