Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Herzog, Pope Leo discuss antisemitism amid Bondi massacre

The Israeli head of state will host local Christian leaders at the President’s Residents in Jerusalem for an annual holiday gathering.

Pope Leo, Isaac Herzog
Israeli President Isaac Herzog meets with Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican, Sept. 4, 2025. Credit: Vatican Media.

In the wake of the terrorist attack on Jews in Sydney, Australia, Israeli President Isaac Herzog spoke on Wednesday with Pope Leo XIV about the rise of global antisemitism.

The president tweeted that during their phone call, he expressed the “urgent need to combat all forms of this hatred.”

The call was made in light of the upcoming Christmas holiday.

Herzog extended his warm wishes to the pontiff and Christian communities around the world, stressing Israel’s “important relationship with the Holy See and Christians around the world.”

The president said he took “tremendous pride in Israel’s Christian communities, whose leaders will gather for an annual festive meeting at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem in the coming weeks.

“We both expressed hope for peace and a brighter future for the world following the New Year,” Israel’s head of state noted.

On Monday, the pope called for prayers for the victims of Sydney massacre, writing in a post on X that the slain and wounded should be “entrusted to the Lord.”

Fifteen people were murdered and more than 40 wounded in the terrorist shooting at Sydney’s popular Bondi Beach.

See more from JNS Staff
An investigation into a swastika drawn by a teen in a Syosset high school bathroom led police to discover chemicals and explosive materials purchased by his father.
The 18 year old allegedly worked with two other unknown individuals, who have not yet been apprehended.
Elana Stern, of the firm Ropes and Gray, told JNS that “no student and no family should have to experience what Eden and Montana Horwitz have had to experience.”
Roy Altman sees his work through the Jewish prism of judges who are “of the people, to understand the community in which they live, their fears, their hopes, their aspirations.”
Jon Husted’s press secretary said he joined the task force because of “violence against Jewish communities on the rise.”
“I can’t recall ever hearing something so absurd from someone in the administration,” Simcha Felder told JNS. “That’s unconscionable and unacceptable.”