Footage has emerged of the rowdy moment Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was heckled while walking the crowds at an event to mark the one year anniversary of Hamas’ October 7 terrorist attack.
Mr Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton both got very different receptions at pro-Israel vigils marking the first anniversary of the October 7 massacre on Monday evening.
Footage shot by SBS News emerged on Tuesday showing Mr Albanese copping jeers as he walked through a crowd of about 6,000 people at the Illuminate October event in Moorabin, in Melbourne’s south-east, flanked by rabbi Gabi Kaltmann.
While some attendees greeted the PM warmly, the video showed one attendee saying ‘tell him to go home’, another calling the PM an expletive and a third attendee suggesting the politicians in attendance ‘need to grow some balls’.
One attendee said ‘tell him to go home’, another called the PM an expletive, there were cries of shame and one attendee made a sarcastic remark about there being politicians ‘in the vicinity… you need to grow some balls’.
Others made their displeasure known by holding placards that stood out in the crowd. ‘Shame on Albo,’ one read. ‘Photo opportunity only! No genuine support for Jewish community.’
Mr Albanese did not speak at the event, organised by Zionism Victoria and the Jewish cultural group Habayit, but did join attendees in a procession of hand-painted lanterns to commemorate the 1,200 people murdered by terrorists a year ago, and the 251 hostages who were taken – 97 of whom are still unaccounted for.
Meanwhile in Sydney, Mr Dutton received a warm reception when he addressed a 12,000 crowd at a commemoration organised by the Zionist Council of NSW and the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies in Sydney’s east.
He was loudly cheered as he denounced anti-Semitism directed toward Jewish people since the ‘horrors and heartbreak’ of October 7, 2023.
‘That day of depravity, the greatest loss of Jewish life on a single day since the Holocaust, awoke and exposed an anti-Semitic rot afflicting western democracies,’ he said.
Mr Dutton said the past year had been the ‘most shocking period of our country in my lifetime’.
He said there had been a ‘moral fog’ and ‘vacuum of leadership’ in , and spoke about the anti-Semitic chants heard on the steps of the Sydney Opera House on October 9 last year.
‘In that vacuum, intolerable incidents have been tolerated and each intolerable incident has emboldened the next.
‘The last 12 months constitute one of the most difficult periods for Jewish ns in our nation’s history. So in the interest of moral clarity, let me be clear, Israel has every right to defend its territory,’ Mr Dutton said.
In Melbourne, Zionism Victoria president Yossi Goldfarb was applauded and cheered when he accused the federal government of being ‘weak’ regarding the defence of Israel.
He said Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen were ‘enemies of Israel’ and a ‘pernicious threat’ that must be defeated.
Mr Goldfarb said anti-Semitism in was ‘simply out of control … a threat to everything that makes our country unique and great.
‘There is a permissiveness that has led anti-Semitism fester, a permissiveness encouraged by weak and ambiguous expositions of our foreign policy,’ he said.
‘In our community’s view, they have weakened our social cohesion, leaving us to feel the state of Israel has been abandoned as a natural ally of the n people.’
Other dignitaries in attendance at the Melbourne vigil included attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, Jewish MP Josh Burns, Victorian premier, Jacinta Allan and her deputy Ben Carroll,
More than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in the deadly conflict that followed the October 7 attacks on Israel.