Melbourne vigil demands more solidarity with Israeli women

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Organisers of a vigil in Melbourne on Monday evening say prominent female advocacy groups have failed to show adequate solidarity with Israeli women attacked in Hamasā€™ October 7 invasion.

The vigil in Elsternwick, in Melbourneā€™s south-east, attracted hundreds of attendees and featured a speech by Kylie Moore-Gilbert, the Australian academic who was held in an Iranian prison for 804 days.

About 500 people gathered for the vigil in Elsternwick on Monday evening.Credit: Simon Schluter

The women from Melbourneā€™s Jewish community who organised the event said groups such as the United Nations, Australiaā€™s #MeToo movement, feminists and progressive politicians had ā€œchosen to ignore, contextualise or significantly delay any public response to the sexual crimes of October 7ā€.

ā€œThe scepticism and gaslighting of Israeli women and children who were violently raped and tortured contravenes the very tenets of these activists and organisations ā€“ namely, to support and believe all victims,ā€ organisers wrote in a statement.

The UN has commenced an inquiry into war crimes on both sides of the Israel-Hamas conflict. It announced last week that the scope would expand to investigate ā€œnumerous accountsā€ of sexual violence by Hamas that have not yet been able to be officially verified.

Israel says the militant group killed 1200 people and took 240 hostages on October 7 before about 105 hostages ā€“ many of them women and children – were released during a seven-day ceasefire that ended last week.

Heavy fighting has since resumed in Gaza, where more than 13,000 Palestinians have died, according to Hamas-run authorities.

On a warm Monday evening at Hopetoun Gardens in Elsternwick, white shirts with the messages ā€œNo Excuseā€ and ā€œWe Believe Themā€ were distributed to approximately 500 attendees. They taped their mouths shut to represent the perceived silence they were protesting and held placards with messages such as ā€œ#MeToo Unless youā€™re a Jewā€.

Moore-Gilbert said she wanted to acknowledge two simultaneous situations: the deaths of innocent women and children in Gaza as well as ā€œhorrific, unspeakableā€ sexual violence against Israelis.

ā€œIt is excruciatingly painful to watch some Western feminists and international organisations tie themselves in knots attempting to minimise, quantify or, even worse, justifyā€ sexual violence on October 7, she said.

Attendees at the vigil at Hopetoun Gardens in Elsternwick hold an Israeli flag.Credit: Simon Schluter

Moore-Gilbert, who was imprisoned in Iran on espionage charges until November 2020, said she had ā€œno doubtā€ her former captors were involved in the events of October 7

In an example cited by organisers, United Nations Women wrote on social media on December 2 that it was ā€œalarmed by the numerous accounts of gender-based atrocities and sexual violence during those attacksā€.

Organisers said the post failed to explicitly reference Israeli women.

ā€œItā€™s too little, too late. And itā€™s not enough,ā€ the organisers said.

Federal Liberal senator Sarah Henderson also spoke at the vigil, saying Australians needed to know about and condemn ā€œthe rape, the brutality, the kidnapping, the torture and the murderā€, without citing specific examples.

Henderson received a loud cheer as she appeared to denounce recent pro-Palestine school student protests across the country.

ā€œStudents should be in school, not protesting on the streets. Not being used as political pawns,ā€ she said.

State Liberal MPs David Southwick and Georgie Crozier also attended, while federal Labor MP Josh Burns had a statement read in his absence.

Georgina Williams, the chair of UN Women Australia, was announced as being in attendance but did not speak.

Pro-Palestine protests have been organised for the last eight Sundays in Melbourneā€™s CBD, attracting thousands of marchers.

On Monday, six police officers patrolled the event, but there was no repeat of the fighting between protesters that occurred in nearby Caulfield a month ago. Those angry clashes resulted in police using pepper spray to separate two opposing groups.

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