Bondi, tennis ball bomb and Australian police
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Hanukkah, Bondi Beach and Australia
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The Jewish community is always thinking about their safety, leaders said. But "joy and love and community" can't be dimmed.
The Western Journal on MSN
The Bondi Beach Hanukkah massacre and the Islamist blind spot the West refuses to confront
Bondi Beach should have been a place of light. On that warm December evening, Jews gathered along Sydney's shoreline for Chanukah by the Sea, a public Hanukkah celebration marked by prayer, music, and remembrance.
An event to mark the first day of the Jewish celebration Hanukkah was taking place on Bondi Beach, very close to the bridge where the men were firing from. More than 1,000 were in attendance. Premier Minns also paid tribute to a man filmed wrestling a gun from one of the attackers.
Terror collapses geography. It reminds us how fragile ordinary life can be and how quickly violence intrudes into places of peace. Even from Santa Rosa, the pain feels close — because Jewish pain is never distant.
Well-intentioned commentators have proclaimed anguish that this holiday of “light” and “togetherness” could be marred with a massacre. But that vision of Hanukkah is a lie.
Thousands of surfers and swimmers at Bondi Beach gathered for a mass paddle, forming a heart in the water, to pay tribute to the victims of the recent mass shooting at a Hanukkah event, which killed 15 people and injured dozens more.
The Jewish Community Relations Council of the Bay Area is calling for the resignation of a local mayor who reposted conspiracy theories to his Linkedin account that claimed the Bondi Beach attack on a Hanukkah celebration was a “false flag” perpetrated by Israel.
Cops in Australia say suspects detained en route to Bondi Beach have ideological link with the terrorists * Funeral held for Jewish couple killed while trying to disarm one of the attackers