Judaism in Australia
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Total population | |
---|---|
99,956[1] 0.4% of Australia's population | |
Languages | |
Australian English, Hebrew, Yiddish, Russian, Hungarian, Romanian, French, Persian, Arabic, Spanish, Afrikaans, Bukhori, Polish, German, Chinese. |
Judaism is a minority religion in Australia. 99,956 Australians identified as Jewish in the 2021 census, which accounts for about 0.4% of the population.[3] This is a 9.8% increase in numbers from the 2016 census.
There are many estimates of how many Jews are in Australia, with some estimates going as high as 250,000 [an estimate which, if based on the number of possibly Jewish family names in Australia, seems quite probable given the dilution of Jewish bloodlines after many generations of marrying out and other moves away from religious observance: unfortunately, the Bureau of Statistics reports only census enumerations of Jews by religion and not Jews by bloodline (ancestry)
History
[edit]In 1830 the first Jewish wedding in Australia was celebrated, the contracting parties being Moses Joseph and Rosetta Nathan.[4]
Jewish immigration came at a time of antisemitism and the Returned Services League and other groups publicized cartoons to encourage the government and the immigration Minister Arthur Calwell to stem the flow of Jewish immigrants.[5]
Affiliations
[edit]Until the 1930s, all synagogues in Australia were affiliated with Orthodox, acknowledging leadership of the Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom. To this day, about 70% of synagogues in Australia are Orthodox.
There had been at least two short-lived efforts to establish Reform congregations, the first as early as the 1890s. However, in 1930, under the leadership of Ada Phillips, a Liberal or Progressive congregation, Temple Beth Israel (Melbourne, Australia), was permanently established in Melbourne. In 1938 the long-serving Senior Rabbi, Rabbi Dr Herman Sanger, was instrumental in establishing another synagogue, Temple Emanuel in Sydney. He also played a part in founding a number of other Liberal synagogues in other cities in both Australia and New Zealand. The first Australian-born rabbi, Rabbi Dr John Levi, served the Australian Liberal movement.[6] These congregations are supported by the Sydney-based Union for Progressive Judaism.
Demographics
[edit]About 90 percent of the Australian Jewish community live in Sydney and Melbourne.[7]
The Jewish Community Council of Victoria has estimated that 60,000 Australian Jews live in Victoria.[8] In Frankston, the Jewish community nearly doubled between 2007 and 2012.[9]
In Adelaide Australian Jews have been present throughout the history of the city, with many successful civic leaders and people in the arts.[10]
According to the 2016 census, the Jewish population numbered 91,020 individuals, of whom 46% lived in Greater Melbourne, 39% in Greater Sydney, and 6% in Greater Perth. The states and territories with the highest proportion of Jews are Victoria (0.71%) and New South Wales (0.49%), whereas those with the lowest are the Northern Territory and Tasmania (both 0.05%).[11]
The same social and cultural characteristics of Australia that facilitated the extraordinary economic, political, and social success of the Australian Jewish community have also been attributed to contributing to widespread assimilation.[12]
Community success can also be measured by the vibrancy of Australian Jewish Media. While traditional Jewish print media is in decline,[13] new media forms such as podcasts,[14] online magazines,[15] and blogs[16] have stepped into the breach.[17][18]
Part of a series on |
Jews and Judaism |
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People
[edit]Academics
[edit]- Roy Clive Abraham, linguist
- Bernhard Neumann, German-born British-Australian mathematician
- Peter Singer, philosopher
- Ghil'ad Zuckermann, linguist and revivalist
Artists and entertainers
[edit]- Lior Attar, singer, musician
- Danny Ben-Moshe, writer
- John Bluthal, actor
- Saskia Burmeister, actress
- Isla Fisher, actress
- Amelia Frid, Russian-born actress
- Renee Geyer, soul singer
- David Helfgott, pianist (inspired Academy Award-winning film Shine)
- Barrie Kosky, opera director
- Ben Lee, singer, songwriter and actor
- David Malouf, writer
- Miriam Margolyes, British-Australian actress
- Leon Pole, artist
- Ohad Rain, Australian-born Israeli singer-songwriter
- John Safran, comedian
- Troye Sivan, South African-born Australian singer, actor and model
- Elana Stone, musician
- Yael Stone, actress
- Felix Werder, German-born composer
- Yitzhak Yedid, Israeli-born composer
Business people
[edit]- Alan Finkel, Australia's Chief Scientist
- John Gandel, businessman, philanthropist
- David Gonski, businessman, philanthropist
- Solomon Lew, businessman
- Frank Lowy, Slovak-born Israeli Australian businessman
- Anthony Pratt, Australian businessman
- Richard Pratt, businessman
- Sheree Rubinstein, entrepreneur, women's business leader and advocate
- Sidney Sinclair, businessman
- Victor Smorgon, businessman
- Harry Triguboff, Chinese-born Australian businessman
- Alex Waislitz, businessman
- Nick Molnar, entrepreneur, businessman
Legal system
[edit]- James Spigelman, Former Chief Justice of New South Wales
- James Edelman, High Court Justice
- Louis Waller, legal academic and head of Monash law faculty
Politicians
[edit]- Hajnal Ban Black, Israeli-born author, politician
- Josh Burns, member for Macnamara
- Sir Zelman Cowen, politician, Governor-General of Australia
- Michael Danby, member for Melbourne Ports
- Mark Dreyfus, attorney general of Australia
- Syd Einfeld, Australian politician and Jewish community leader
- Josh Frydenberg, politician and former deputy leader of the Liberal Party
- Sir Isaac Isaacs, judge and politician, Chief Justice of Australia, and Governor-General of Australia
- Henry Ninio, Egyptian-born Lord Mayor of Adelaide
- Martin Pakula, politician
- Kerryn Phelps, president of the AMA and independent member for Wentworth
- Mark Regev, Australian-born Israeli diplomat and civil servant
- David Southwick, politician
- Leo Port, Lord Mayor of Sydney
Rabbis
[edit]- Dr John Levi AM, First Australian born Rabbi, Emeritus Rabbi of Temple Beth Israel and founder of The King David School in Melbourne, Historian of the early Jewish community in Australia
- Raymond Apple, Senior Rabbi of the Great Synagogue of Sydney
- David Bar-Hayim, born David Mandel, head of the Machon Shilo in Israel
- Eliezer Berkovits, leading rabbinic philosopher, served as a rabbi in Sydney 1946-50
- Israel Brodie, Chief Rabbi of the Commonwealth, served as a rabbi in Australia 1923-37
- Harry Freedman, rabbi, author and translator
- Yitzchok Dovid Groner, head of the Yeshiva Centre in Melbourne
- Chaim Gutnick, first head of the Rabbinical Council of Victoria
- Meir Shlomo Kluvgant, senior rabbi in Melbourne
- Karen Soria, Reform rabbi, first woman to serve as a rabbi in Australia
Sportspeople
[edit]- Ashley Brown, soccer player
- Jordan Brown, soccer player
- Gavin Fingleson, Olympic silver medalist baseball player
- Jessica Fox, canoeist, Olympic silver medalist
- Noemie Fox, canoeist
- Todd Goldstein, AFL Player for the North Melbourne Kangaroos
- Todd Greenberg, former NRL executive
- Michael Klinger, cricketer
- Jemima Montag, racewalker, Commonwealth Games 2x gold medallist, Olympian
- Jonathan Moss, former first-class cricketer for the Victoria cricket team (2000 - 2007). Played for Australia at the Maccabiah Games in Israel
- Phil Moss, manager of the Central Coast Mariners in the A-League, and former soccer player in the National Soccer League
- Harry Sheezel, AFL player for the North Melbourne Kangaroos
- Steven Solomon, sprinter
- Lionel Van Prag, speedway champion
- Julien Wiener, cricketer
- David Zalcberg, table tennis player
Other
[edit]- Alex Fein, activist and entrepreneur
- Sir John Monash, distinguished General in the Australian Army during World War I.
- Richard Kingsland, Royal Australian Air Force pilot during World War II, former Secretary of the Departments of Interior, Repatriation, and Veterans' Affairs
- Ikey Solomon, convict transported to Tasmania.
- Sharri Markson, journalist
- Gregory Sher, Australian soldier killed in Afghanistan[19]
See also
[edit]- Antisemitism in Australia
- Australian Association for Jewish Studies
- History of the Jews in Australia
- List of Oceanian Jews
- Religion in Australia
References
[edit]- ^ "Australia's Jewish population rises to 100,000". Haaretz. 2012-06-25. Retrieved 2015-06-06.
- ^ a b c ""Census of Population and Housing - Cultural Diversity, 2016, TableBuilder"". Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
- ^ "Australia's Jewish population at an all-time high". 28 June 2022.
- ^ Suzanne D. Rutland (2008). "Jews". Dictionary of Sydney. Dictionary of Sydney Trust. Retrieved 3 January 2012.
- ^ Rutland, Susan, 2005, The Jews in Australia
- ^ Rubinstein and Freeman, (Editors), "A Time to Keep: The story of Temple Beth Israel: 1930 to 2005" A Special publication of the Australian Jewish Historical Society, 2005.
- ^ Goldberg, Dan (2013-01-02). "Australian Jews may top Forbes' rich list, but 20% live on poverty line Israel News". Haaretz. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
- ^ "Jewish Community Council of Victoria (JCCV) - Overview". JCCV. Archived from the original on 2013-09-08. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
- ^ "Census shows Jews are on the move | The Australian Jewish News". Jewishnews.net.au. 2012-06-29. Retrieved 2013-09-15.
- ^ Adelaide Jewish Museum Archived 2008-12-29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 8 September 2011.
- ^ "Census TableBuilder - Dataset: 2016 Census - Cultural Diversity". Australian Bureau of Statistics – Census 2016. Archived from the original on 14 January 2023. Retrieved 29 July 2017.
- ^ Postrel, Virginia (May 1993). "Uncommon Culture". Reason Magazine. Archived from the original on 10 October 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-05.
- ^ "The Australian Jewish News | Galus Australis | Jewish Life in Australia". galusaustralis.com. Archived from the original on 2018-06-18. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
- ^ "Mazel Tov Cocktail". PodOmatic. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
- ^ "J-Wire". J-Wire. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
- ^ "sensiblejew". sensiblejew.com. Archived from the original on 2017-05-18. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
- ^ "Home - Macroscope". Archived from the original on 2021-04-14. Retrieved 2017-05-18.
- ^ "kvetchr.com". kvetchr.com. Archived from the original on 2018-06-05. Retrieved 2018-06-18.
- ^ "The Last Post Ceremony commemorating the service of (8243734) Private Gregory Sher, 1st Commando Regiment, Afghanistan". www.awm.gov.au. Retrieved 2023-06-07.