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  • Gaza conflict shouldn't spill into Sydney hatred

    Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
    Aug 3 2014

    Gaza conflict shouldn't spill into Sydney hatred

    Kirsty Needham


    When a Ukrainian Catholic Church was sprayed with racist graffiti in
    Lidcombe in Sydney's west, Vic Alhadeff was swiftly onto the media to
    raise the alarm.

    As chairman of the NSW Community Relations Commission, Alhadeff led
    the NSW Government's condemnation of the attack in June, which he said
    echoed Russian President Vladimir Putin's attack on the Ukraine.

    ''It is deeply disappointing that some have seen fit to import
    overseas conflicts and hatreds into our country and onto our
    streets,'' Alhadeff said in a statement.

    Earlier in the year, Alhadeff had been praised by NSW Labor for his
    ''eloquent and dignified'' words opposing the federal government's
    proposal to weaken section 18C of the racial discrimination act. The
    high profile new chairman appeared off to a strong start.

    But when the turbulence of world affairs swept into Sydney for a
    second time - as conflict between Israel and Hamas exploded in the
    Middle East after the execution of three kidnapped Israeli teenagers,
    and Israel unleashed its bombardment of Gaza - Alhadeff was among
    those fanning the hatred.

    It is not surprising that an email issued by Alhadeff in his capacity
    as chief executive of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies expressed
    Israel's line on ''the Hamas terror organisation''. He has been a
    high-profile advocate of Israel for decades, and is paid to do so.

    As has been repeatedly said since Alhadeff's resignation from the NSW
    government commission, in the fallout from those comments, the problem
    is with wearing two hats.

    The important role played by the Community Relations Commission in
    multicultural Sydney, that was handled so deftly by Stepan
    Kerkyasharian for 25 years until his resignation last December, is a
    delicate one.

    There is no doubt that Alhadeff, through his work at the Jewish Board
    of Deputies, has been an enthusiastic advocate for interfaith harmony,
    and bringing young Sydneysiders of different cultural backgrounds
    together to increase understanding. He has constantly spoken out
    against racism.

    But he does so from the perspective of trying to reduce anti-Semitism,
    amid an apparent increase in vilification, and last year's awful
    physical attacks on a Jewish family in Bondi.

    The Community Relations Commission's role is to represent all in the
    wildly mixed bag of multicultural backgrounds that make up the NSW
    population.

    Kerkyasharian was the son of Armenian genocide survivors who spoke
    Turkish, and carefully avoided being drawn into simmering hostilities
    between the two groups over history.

    Alhadeff's appointment had raised eyebrows from the start. Then
    Premier Barry O'Farrell was close to the Jewish community, having
    recently been awarded the Jerusalem Prize by the World Zionist
    Organisation and relaunching the NSW Parliamentary Israeli Friendship
    Group.

    But even within the Jewish Board of Deputies, questions were asked
    about how an inevitable conflict of interest between the commission
    and the Jewish community would be dealt with.

    O'Farrell's solution was to split the commission's leadership into two
    roles: Alhadeff as the chairman, and Hakan Harman, a Turkish-born
    public servant, as chief executive.

    Both Muslim and Jewish communities would be represented.

    This attempt at balance failed. Alhadeff energetically pursued the
    intersecting interests of NSW's ethnic groups and the Jewish community
    - primarily opposition to the Abbott government's repeal of 18c - in
    the media spotlight. Harman quietly went about reviewing the work of
    the commission. While of Muslim background, he wasn't closely involved
    with Sydney's increasingly aggrieved Muslim community.

    With Alhadeff gone, Harman will step into a more public role for the commission.

    Alhadeff's downfall was partly bad timing, said one insider. His email
    preceded a massive escalation of the Gaza conflict, and horrible daily
    images on Australian television screens of injured and dead
    Palestinian children. ''He became the live local person to hurl rocks
    at,'' said the source.

    That's not a position any multicultural agency head should ever place
    themselves in.


    http://www.smh.com.au/comment/gaza-conflict-shouldnt-spill-into-sydney-hatred-20140801-zzi7i.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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