“Many of us Aussies feel excluded in mainstream Australian society shaped by the white Australian policy hangover, [and] find it hard to be accepted at face value and as a consequence wear a handicap for being non-white,” she said.
The Australian police and intelligence agency has charged the teenager with committing a “terrorist offence”, following evidence of religious motivations.
With few violent attacks in Australian history, however, experts said what had happened in Sydney was no different from the rest of the world where social complexities and emerging divisions had been reduced to “good versus bad”.
These tensions were laid bare when riots broke outside the church after the stabbing on Monday. Crowds of people – some chanting “bring him out” – besieged the church, before demonstrators turned on police, hurting more than 50 officers and damaging police cars.
Paramedics sought refuge from the rioters in the church.
Local media said text messages spread quickly that night calling for Christians to take revenge on the 16-year-old who knifed Bishop Mar Mari Emmanuel for allegedly “swearing at his prophet”. Emmanuel is recovering after surgery.
NSW state premier Chris Minns in turn warned that tit-for-tat violence would be met with the “full force of the law”.
Terrorism versus mental health
In the aftermath of the horror, the Muslim community in Sydney has been on high alert.
A major Sydney mosque, the Lakemba Mosque, received fire bomb threats after the church attack on Monday night, as Muslims and other religious communities including the Assyrian Australian Association condemned the violence and called for unity and peace, and for places of worship to be respected following the second stabbing.
However, the Islamic Council of NSW said in a statement on Tuesday it was bewildered the Bondi Junction attack was attributed to mental health issues while the church incident was labelled as terrorism even though the teen suspect was known to have a history of behavioural and mental health issues.
In Cauchi’s case, he was diagnosed with schizophrenia at 17 and his father told local press he was frustrated he could not get a girlfriend. Police said footage from the carnage last weekend showed Cauchi targeted women but they were still investigating his motive.
The 16-year-old’s father told the Lebanese Muslim Association he did not see any “signs of [his son] becoming extreme” although he was disobedient.
“The signal this sends to the Australian community is that terrorism is solely reserved for Muslims … mental health issues like terrorism are not exclusive to any community,” the council said in a statement.
“The NSW government’s decision to label this as a terrorist act is irresponsible and we believe will only increase the likelihood of further tensions within the Australian community by fuelling social division and disharmony.”
A mirror on society
Even though authorities and experts were satisfied the church stabbing met the definition of terrorism, Greg Noble, a professor at the Western Sydney University’s Institute for Culture and Society, said the label was “extremely harmful” to Australian society.
“It escalates the nature of the incident – and changes the way people see it,” he told This Week in Asia.
“This doesn’t mean it wasn’t a tragic incident that had its basis in religious differences, but it comes down to a young man with a troubled history responding individually to a perceived grievance. To lump this together with systematic, large-scale attacks by well-resourced organisations seems absurd.”
Religious leaders such as the Lebanese Muslim Association’s Gamel Kheir told local media that police should have been more thorough with their investigations before calling it terrorism.
While this was not a problem isolated to Australia, Noble said society had become conditioned to want “simple explanations of events” and to reduce the complexities of a situation “to a good and bad side”.
Noble, however, voiced concern over what he said was poor coverage from the media and social commentators in Australia on the Israel-Gaza war.
“Political leaders and social commentators have a responsibility to be much more careful in the way they talk about events, pick sides in conflicts, and try to harness tragedies as PR opportunities,” he said.
Other experts also point to potential fractures in society caused by politicians looking to profit from dividing people.
Josh Roose, a political sociologist at Deakin University, told local media this week that Australia had become polarised. With so many actors seeking to score points over the war in the Middle East, people could be “pulled to extremes”, he warned.
There have been weekly pro-Palestinian marches in Australia since the war started.
“Political emotion is just heightened to an extent that we haven’t seen in this country for a long time … particularly those who believe themselves have a vested stake or in some way, shape or form, a connection to the conflict, feeling it deeply in everyday life,” he said.
The speed with which people started spreading Islamophobia and antisemitism after the Bondi Junction incident was the outcome of politicians weaponising racism amid the Israel-Gaza war, the White Rose Society, an anti-fascist group, told This Week in Asia.
“After the Bondi Junction attack, we saw the worst of social media on display, with people looking to weaponise the incident to score points against everything from Palestine and Israel to bike lanes,” the group’s spokesman said.
“The current state of affairs is that bad actors are financially rewarded for spreading misinformation and disinformation on the world’s largest social platforms.”
The group urged Australia’s leaders to display moral courage and reject genocide or risk something worse than the Cronulla riots – a clash between Anglo and Middle-Eastern Australians in Sydney in 2005 – which became a national shame.
Scanlon Institute summarised these concerns in its annual report last year saying that social cohesion in Australia was under pressure and declining on some fronts.
“Our sense of national pride and belonging has been declining for some years, discrimination and prejudice remain stubbornly common, while in more recent years, we are reporting greater financial stress, increased concern for economic inequality and growing pessimism for the future,” the independent research body said.
Last week, a parliamentary inquiry called out the proposed controversial deportation bill by the Albanese government as a possible breach of human rights. The law seeks to ban entire nationalities from coming to Australia with some parliamentarians saying it could lead to people being “rounded up to be removed”.