Canberra, โคAustralia – Aโ surge โin anti-Semitic and Islamophobic sentiment is challenging Australia’s long-held reputation for tolerance and multiculturalism, according to recent โreports. The increaseโ inโข prejudice coincidesโฃ with heightened global tensions stemming from โconflicts in the middle Eastโ and follows the re-electionโ of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese withโ a ampleโฃ progressive โmajority.
Australia,a nation of 26 million people where nearly one-third ofโฃ the โคpopulation is foreign-born,has traditionally prided itself on its โคinclusive society.โ However, data indicates a growing โคundercurrentโ of tension. the Executive Council of Australian Judaism โandโ the Association of Jewish Organizations โinโฃ the country documented a “mass โincrease” inโ anti-Semitic incidents in 2024, totaling 2,062. this โขfigure โฃrepresents a tripling of incidents compared to those recorded โbefore the โOctober 7, 2023, attacksโ by Hamas in southern israel. Theโค annual โฃreport tracking these incidents dates back to 1990.
Alongside โrising anti-Semitism, Islamophobiaโฃ has alsoโค seen a notable increase.Aโค recent Annualโฃ SCANLON Foundation Survey, โwhich has measured social โฃcohesionโค in Australia โsince โข2008, revealed that 34% of Australian adults express a “somewhat negative” โor “very negative” attitude towards their Muslim neighbors. Thisโ represents a substantial increase fromโ 27% in 2023, coinciding with โthe onset of the โconflict โin Gaza. Anti-Semitic sentiment, โคas measured by the same survey, rose from โข9% in 2023 to 13% โคinโ 2024.
The Albanese โgovernment,re-elected โwith a strong โprogressive mandate,facesโ theโฃ challenge of addressing these rising tensions while upholdingโข Australia’s commitmentโ to multiculturalism. The long-term implications of these trends on Australian society remain to be seen.