Israeli President Isaac Herzog has laid a wreath and two stones from Jerusalem at Bondi Beach, the site of a shooting that targeted a Jewish festival in December, at the start of a controversial visit. When one Jew is hurt, all Jews feel their pain, he said, adding he was there to embrace and console the bereaved families. Security has been tight for the four-day visit during which he will also travel to Canberra and Melbourne and meet Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Senior Jewish leaders have said the trip will comfort a grieving community, but others have said he should not have been invited due to allegations he has incited genocide in Gaza. The president was invited by Albanese after the shooting at Bondi, in which 15 people were killed, including a 10-year-old girl, at an event celebrating Hanukkah. The prime minister has said the visit will contribute to social cohesion and a greater sense of unity after the Bondi attack but the visit is expected to be met with nationwide protests, including one in central Sydney on Monday evening. Organisers have said 5,000 people will attend the protest, which is expected to take place despite restrictions on protests brought in by the New South Wales government after the Bondi attack. The Palestine Action Group was on Monday also challenging a decision by the state government to invoke rarely used major event powers during Herzog's visit, which give police additional powers, including the ability to close specific locations, the right to search people and the imposing of fines of up to $5,500 (£2,839, US$3,862) for non-compliance. Alex Ryvchin, co-chair executive of Australia's peak Jewish body, the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, on Monday said Herzog's visit was warmly welcomed. For the victim families and for the survivors [of the Bondi attack], it means a great deal, he said. His visit will lift the spirits of a pained community and we hope will lead to a much-needed recalibration of bilateral relations between two historic allies, he said. However, other groups, including the Jewish Council of Australia (JCA), set up in 2024 to call out antisemitism and support Palestinian freedom, and the Australian National Imams Council, have said Herzog should not have been invited. Inviting a foreign head of state who is implicated in an ongoing genocide as a representative of the Jewish community is deeply offensive and risks entrenching the dangerous and antisemitic conflation between Jewish identity and the actions of the Israeli state, said JCA executive officer Sarah Schwartz last week. This does not make Jews safer. It does the opposite. A letter organized by the JCA and signed by 600 Australian Jews was published in the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age condemning the visit. On Monday, Australian Federal MPs and state Labor MPs have expressed objections to the visit. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Thursday said she understood the depth of feeling about this visit but urged its critics to consider the context. We have the Australian Jewish community who have been targeted in an overtly antisemitic terrorist attack. We have had 15 Australians die, we have families mourning, and this was a request from the Jewish community for President Herzog to visit.\
Israeli President Honors Bondi Attack Victims Amid Controversy

Israeli President Honors Bondi Attack Victims Amid Controversy
Isaac Herzog lays a wreath at Bondi Beach in tribute to victims of the recent shooting, while facing protests and criticism regarding his presence in Australia.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog began his controversial visit to Australia by laying a wreath at Bondi Beach to honor the victims of a shooting during a Jewish festival. While some Jewish leaders praised the gesture as a source of comfort, others protested his invitation, citing his alleged incitement of violence in Gaza. Security measures are heightened amid expected protests against his visit, as opinions regarding the implications of Herzog’s actions and statements remain divided.



















