Segal defends response to neo-Nazi rally as envoys disagree on terror definition
December 2, 2025 by Rob Klein
Australia’s Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism, Jillian Segal, appeared before Senate Estimates today, where she was questioned about her office’s response to a neo-Nazi demonstration held outside NSW Parliament on 8 November.
Chancellor warns universities failed Jewish students after October 7
December 2, 2025 by Rob Klein
Western Sydney University chancellor Jennifer Westacott revealed her childhood experience of “severe violence” and antisemitism in a speech to Australian Jewish Funders and the Dor Foundation on Monday, 1 December.
From Australia’s Jewish past
December 2, 2025 by Ruth Lilian
Sydney David Einfeld AO – Politician and Community Leader Read more
A rabbi’s failed attempt to clean up Holocaust distortion
December 2, 2025 by Menachem Rosensaft
On November 20, Thomas Rose, the U.S. ambassador to Poland, delivered a speech in Warsaw in which he categorised as a “historic injustice” and “grotesque falsehood” any suggestion that “Poland shares guilt for the barbaric crimes committed against it” during World War II, presumably including the murder of millions of Polish Jews in German-occupied Poland. Read more
Why stripping “religion” from terror laws puts Jews at risk
December 2, 2025 by Michael Gencher
More than two years after 7 October 2023, life for Jewish Australians feels very different. Read more
Netanyahu appears in Israeli court after pardon request
December 2, 2025 by Reuters
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has appeared in court for the first time since asking the country’s president for a pardon in his long-running corruption trial. Read more
Feintooner
December 2, 2025 by Feintooner
This week’s cartoon: Interfaith Solidarity Read more
Combat troops:computerised attention training can significantly reduce Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder risk
December 2, 2025 by Noga Shahar
A joint study by Tel Aviv University, the IDF Medical Corps, and the U.S. Department of Defense has found that a series of specialised computer-based training exercises can significantly reduce the risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among IDF combat soldiers. Read more
Testimony project helps women in the IDF navigate healing
December 2, 2025 by Rolene Marks - JNS
As attention shifts from the battlefield to the long road of recovery, Israelis are beginning to speak more openly about the trauma of the war triggered by the Hamas atrocities of Oct. 7, 2023. For women, that process often unfolds differently. According to the American Psychological Association, women are twice as likely as men to experience post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and are also more likely to seek help.
During Operation Iron Swords, officially named the War of Redemption by the Israeli Cabinet, many women chose silence. With hostages held in Gaza and families mourning loved ones who fell in battle, they felt that their personal trauma was insignificant by comparison.
“Women experience war very differently from men,” said Ronit Shoval, CEO of the Eden Association, a nonprofit that supports girls and women across Israel. “War is not only about combat. We wanted to look at it from many perspectives.”
Shoval pointed to the moment Israeli families were forced into bomb shelters on Oct. 7 as one of the clearest illustrations of gendered responses to crisis. “Mothers immediately took responsibility for calming children and separating them from the terror outside,” she said. “Many men searched for weapons and took on the role of defenders.”
Women also process trauma differently, she said. While men often look for practical action, women tend to seek emotional expression. Within days of the Hamas massacre, Shoval and her colleagues began asking what could be done.
“One week after Oct. 7, we sat together and asked what our contribution could be,” she recalled. “A woman from the Nova festival wanted to tell her story again and again. I realized that documenting stories was essential to healing. Trauma needs a beginning, middle and end. But history also erases women’s voices. Wars record generals, not individuals. This project became both therapy and testimony.”
Out of that realization came “October 7th-Her Story: Voices from the Frontline,” a testimony initiative that documents the experiences of female reservists and combat soldiers who fought on the battlefield to defend Israel. To date, some 80 women have shared their stories.

Video testimonies
Adi Weiss, the manager of the project, said it initially began as a podcast before shifting to video testimonies.
“We saw how important it was for these women to speak, to process their trauma on their own terms,” she said. “Trauma victims feel the need to repeat their stories. But over time, details fade or become blocked. We wanted to preserve their voices.”
Weiss added that many women who survived attacks in shelters, at Nova and on kibbutzim spoke openly about their fear of sexual assault.
“They said they feared rape more than death,” she said. “And today we know this fear affected men as well.”
When word of the project spread, women began approaching the Eden Association, wanting to participate. For many, it was the first time they told their story to anyone, including family.
“Some canceled multiple times,” Weiss said. “They wanted to speak but were afraid. Our model focuses on control. Trauma steals control. We ask questions carefully and make sure the women remain in charge of their narrative.”

The photograph, “Equals,” featuring Liad Granovich Wiskovsky by photographer Alicia Shachaf was taken in 2025. Photo: Alicia Shachaf.
Telling their stories
The stories they shared are harrowing and powerful. Meital Feldman, an imaging specialist who served as a reservist at Camp Shura identifying casualties, described the emotional toll of her duties.
“I was dealing with death constantly,” she said. “I ran my hands over the body bags, whispering, ‘You are a hero of Israel.’ When I came home, I would scrub myself in the shower to bring back the feeling of life, because death clings to you.”
Maj. May Talker, the commander of a body recovery team at the Nova Festival site, recalled the moment that fractured her emotional defenses. “Next to one of the bodies was a phone. It rang with ‘mom’ on the screen. That was the first moment my focus broke. A mother was searching for her daughter, and I knew the truth.”
She said the war proved the quiet strength of women. “Women did powerful things, not only in combat but throughout everything that happened,” she said. “We should talk about it more.”
For female soldiers, the challenges are layered. They face combat like their male counterparts while also navigating issues of acceptance, identity and physical boundaries in overwhelmingly male units.
“They fight three battles,” Weiss said. “On the battlefield, in their personal lives and in defining who they are.”
Capt. Dr. Bar, a medical officer in the Armored Corps, described the additional pressure. “Because I am a woman, I have to prove myself more,” she said. “So I don’t complain, even when it is hard.”
Some women found expression through art rather than words. The project has already produced three exhibitions featuring artwork and photography. Thirteen women were photographed in environments where they felt most at ease, reclaiming control over how their stories are seen.
For Shoval, the project’s meaning is clear. “This is not only documentation,” she said. “This is survival.”
Scarlett Johansson: Film backer tried to change Shoah plot
December 1, 2025 by JNS
A financial backer of Scarlett Johansson’s feature directorial debut “Eleanor the Great” asked her to change the film’s Holocaust-centered storyline just one month before production was scheduled to begin. Read more
Skulls on the map: Israel’s top diplomat exposes incitement in Palestinian schools
December 1, 2025 by Pesach Benson
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar in Jerusalem presented his Danish counterpart Lars Rasmussen with a map used in a Palestinian Authority elementary school marking Israeli communities with skulls on Sunday. Read more
Netanyahu’s pardon request sparks fierce political reactions
December 1, 2025 by Pesach Benson
The forgotten exodus: Sydney honours 850,000 Jews who fled Arab lands and Iran
December 1, 2025 by Rob Klein
More than 200 people gathered at the National Council of Jewish Women hall in Woollahra on Sunday evening for the annual commemoration honouring Jewish refugees from Arab lands and Iran. Read more
Bernstein and Busoni
December 1, 2025 by Shirley Politzer
An opera review by Shirley Politzer Read more
Trump hoodwinked by MBS in White House meeting
December 1, 2025 by David Singer
President Trump was hoodwinked by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman (MBS) during their meeting in the White House on 18 November. Read more






