Why AJA?

The Australian Jewish Association (AJA) was created to fill a void and provide a strong, principled voice for the Jewish community in Australia.

Why AJA

To be guided by authentic Jewish values means having regard in policy formulation to principles of Torah. This imposes no requirement on how members conduct their lives. The organisation will welcome members of all levels of observance.
Who would have guessed that AJA would be such a phenomenal success and important voice in Australian politics over such a short time. The reduction in Australian payments to UNRWA is one such victory.

Rowan Dean

I am a huge admirer of the AJA and I follow your work closely.

Col Richard Kemp

AJA is a really important development in Jewish community advocacy.

Senator James Patterson

Thank you for what the AJA does for Australia.

John Roskam

I love the AJA

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

WE ARE MAKING A DIFFERENCE

Jewish Australians are voting with their ‘clicks’. In just a few short years, AJA has grown to be the largest Australian Jewish organisation on social media.

We are

making a difference

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Our weekly Zoom Speaker Series takes place each Wednesday at 8pm (Sydney/Melbourne time).

High level international & local speakers explore the major issues for the Jewish community, Israel, & Australia.

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Australian Jewish Association – AJA22 hours ago
Police admit mistakes in Town Hall confrontation

Victoria Police have acknowledged making errors in their handling of a confrontation between Jewish community members and pro-Palestinian protesters outside Melbourne Town Hall in February.

Internal documents reveal police made false public statements about the incident and should not have issued them with a “move on” order.

Documents released under Freedom of Information laws show police incorrectly told media that Mark and Sharon Kuper did not have valid tickets to attend a Melbourne City Council meeting where a motion in favour of a ceasefire in Gaza was being debated and had not reported being assaulted, when both claims were wrong.

During a media conference the day after the 20 February incident, police said neither had tickets, that Sharon was only on a standby list and that Mark’s registration was in another name. They also claimed the couple had not reported being assaulted.

However, Deputy Commissioner Neil Paterson later told colleagues that video footage “clearly shows” both statements were incorrect – the Kupers did have valid tickets and Mark Kuper had sought to report the assault at the scene.

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