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This year’s Australia Day brings a painful realisation

13 1
26.01.2026

In broad daylight, two monuments were smashed in Melbourne’s Flagstaff Gardens last week. One of them was an 1871 memorial to the city’s earliest British settlers; the other commemorated Victoria’s separation from New South Wales in 1850. These monuments not only were sledgehammered, but daubed with the ugly words ‘death to Australia’ and the provocative, hateful triangle symbol of Hamas.

It wouldn’t be Australia’s national day without such acts of vandalism

It wouldn’t be Australia’s national day without such acts of vandalism, meant to deface the anniversary of the day a British convict settlement was proclaimed at Sydney. Last year, it was statues of James Cook, the man who, until the 1970s, was hailed and celebrated as Australia’s discoverer. These acts of destruction against symbols of Australia’s colonial past carry their own symbolism, the perpetrators’ acts of defiance against a nation and society they abhor.

This year, however, such vandalism matters little. What has shaken Australia to the core is the murderous rampage at Bondi Beach a month ago, when two Islamist extremists, an immigrant father and his radicalised, Australian-born, son, killed 15 and wounded dozens more at a joyful Hanukkah celebration. That act of anti-Semitic terror stabbed the heart of an Australian community conditioned to believe how wonderful, harmonious and diverse Australians are.

Instead, many for the first time are realising that Australia is not a single community, nor........

© The Spectator