Jewish students bullied while learning about Holocaust

Police at the Royal Commission on anti-semitism and Social Cohesion
Police removed a man with a slogan "anti-Semitism. Proud to be accused. Speak up!" on his T-shirt. -AAP Image

Jewish students were subjected to anti-Semitic bullying while learning about the Holocaust, an inquiry has been told, while outside a man wearing a swastika-emblazoned T-shirt was removed by police and later arrested.

The Royal Commission on anti-Semitism and Social Cohesion is holding two weeks of public hearings into the lived experiences of Australia's Jewish community.

A Jewish year 10 student, speaking under a pseudonym, said students performed Nazi salutes towards her in class while studying Holocaust book, The Boy in Striped Pyjamas.

The girl told the inquiry at other times she had coins thrown at her, was called an Israeli spy and had a swastika scratched next to her name.

A former high school history teacher told the inquiry after the attacks by Hamas on Israel on October 7, 2023, the anti-Semitism increased, with students "parroting" what they were seeing either online, from family, or elsewhere.

"Even though they know it's wrong and it's offensive … they actually don't really know what they're doing and why they're doing it," she said.

While leading a group of Jewish year five students on an excursion to a Melbourne Museum in July 2025, teacher's aid, Blake Shaw told the commission they were targeted with anti-Semitic abuse by much older students.

"There was a group of about five or six students that were sort of circling," Mr Shaw said.

"One stepped forward .. and started saying, 'free, free, Palestine', laughing."

Mr Shaw said his concerns were dismissed by the teacher from the high school, who said that was just their beliefs.

The impact on his students, who were aged 10 or 11, was visibly noticeable, he said.

"They looked smaller, almost like they were kind of crouching down," Mr Shaw said.

"A lot of them started scrunching up their tops to hide the school emblem."

Outside Wednesday's hearing, police removed a 68-year-old man wearing a shirt bearing the slogan, "anti-Semitism. Proud to be accused. Speak up!".

The man sarcastically denied deliberately targeting the commission.

"I have business in town and I wear this all the time," the man told media.

It is illegal to display swastikas in public in NSW, with police saying the man later attended Manly Police station where he was arrested while inquiries continued.

Melbourne man Dean Cherny told the commission Israel's actions in Gaza were not something the Jewish community in Australia can control.

"I hope, and have always hoped, there will be a two-state solution," he said.

"But when other people are saying, 'from the river to the sea', and they're calling for a one-state solution ... who are the people here that are really the ones showing hatred?"