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The Tikvah Podcast

Rabbi Ben Elton on Australian Jewry after Bondi Beach

The Tikvah Podcast

Tikvah

Judaism, News, Politics, Religion & Spirituality

4.8 • 658 Ratings

🗓️ 18 December 2025

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On the evening of December 14, 2025—the first night of Hanukkah—Rabbi Benjamin Elton was driving home from performing a wedding, looking forward to lighting candles with his family. Then his phone began to explode with messages. There were gunmen at Bondi Beach. His wife and children were in lockdown at a nearby event. Names of the dead were coming through—colleagues, community members. For several terrible minutes, he couldn't reach his wife. And he wondered whether he was going to come home to find that he had lost his family.

By the time the shooting stopped, fifteen people were dead, among them two rabbis, an eighty-seven-year-old Holocaust survivor, and a ten-year-old girl. They had been gunned down at a public Hanukkah celebration on one of Australia's most iconic beaches, before a large crowd of Jews who had gathered to light the menorah in the open air—because that's what confident, integrated diaspora communities do.

The massacre at Bondi Beach was the culmination of two years of escalating anti-Semitism that the community had been warning about since October 7. Synagogues firebombed with congregants inside. Cars set ablaze in Jewish neighborhoods. Swastikas painted on schools and daycares. Weekly pro-Palestinian marches past synagogues, with chants of "globalize the intifada." A van discovered full of explosives along with a list of the addresses of Jewish institutions. And through it all, a government that offered sympathy and money for security, but never quite confronted the deeper problem. Until, finally, the community's darkest warnings came true.

Rabbi Benjamin Elton is the chief minister of the Great Synagogue in Sydney—Australia's oldest Jewish congregation, founded in the 1820s, whose pulpit has traditionally made its occupant a primary representative of Judaism to the wider society. He holds a PhD in Jewish history from the University of London, and before entering the rabbinate, he worked in Britain's Ministry of Justice. He is a scholar of Anglo-Jewish history, a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and a Sacks scholar, and, just over a decade ago, spent a year in residence as a fellow at Tikvah. This week, Rabbi Elton has been burying his friends.

He joined Jonathan Silver, the editor of Mosaic, to discuss the recent trials of his family and community, and the growing threat to Australian Jewish security.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On the evening of December 14, 2025, the first night of Hanukkah, Rabbi Benjamin Elton was

0:13.0

driving home from performing a wedding, looking forward to lighting candles with his family.

0:18.3

Then his phone began to explode with messages. There were gunmen at

0:22.9

Bondi Beach. His wife and children were in lockdown at a nearby event. Names of the dead were coming

0:29.1

through, colleagues, community members. For several terrible minutes, he could not reach his wife,

0:35.2

and he wondered, as he tells me in today's conversation,

0:38.5

whether he was going to come home to find he had lost his family.

0:41.9

By the time the shooting stopped, 15 people were dead, two rabbis, an 87-year-old Holocaust

0:46.6

survivor, a 10-year-old girl. They had been gunned down at a public Hanukkah celebration

0:51.2

at one of Australia's most iconic beaches before a large crowd

0:55.3

of Jews who had gathered to light the menorah in the open air, because that is what confident

1:00.5

integrated diaspora communities do. They celebrate their holidays in public. Welcome to the Tikva

1:06.1

podcast. I'm your host, Jonathan Silver. The massacre at Bondi Beach was the culmination of two years

1:11.7

of escalating anti-Semitism that the community had been warning about since October 7th.

1:17.5

Synagogues firebombed with congregants inside. Cars set ablaze in Jewish neighborhoods,

1:23.0

swastikas on schools and daycares, pro-Palestine marches past synagogues every week with chance of

1:29.4

globalized the Intifada. A van discovered full of explosives, with Jewish institutions' addresses

1:35.3

written inside, and through it all, a government that offered sympathy, money for security,

1:41.2

but never quite found the will to confront the deeper problem,

1:45.6

until, finally, the community's darkest warnings came true.

1:50.1

Rabbi Benjamin Elton is the chief minister of the great synagogue in Sydney,

1:54.3

Australia's oldest Jewish congregation, founded in the 1820s,

...

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