The Last Thing A Dying Jewish Man Saw In The Hospital Was Anti-Jewish Hate They Put On His Wall
In the final hours of an elderly Jewish man’s life at Melbourne’s Alfred Hospital, someone plastered anti-Israel stickers on the wall beside his deathbed — a Star of David with a red line slashed through it. He died staring at it.
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That stomach-churning detail is buried inside a sweeping exposé of rampant antisemitism festering inside Australian hospitals — and it lands like a gut punch just as a Sydney court handed a jaw-dropping legal victory to two nurses caught on camera bragging about murdering Israeli patients.
A judge this week tossed the viral video of Ahmad Nadir, 28, and Sarah Abu Lebdeh, 27 — the Bankstown-Lidcombe Hospital night-shift nurses who told Israeli influencer Max Veifer on ChatRoulette that they wouldn’t just refuse Jewish patients, they’d kill them. Nadir punctuated the point with a slow throat-slitting gesture and boasted about sending Israelis to hell.
Gone. Inadmissible. Because nobody asked their permission to record them.
Judge Michael McHugh of Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court acknowledged the footage was “at the very least likely highly disturbing to right-minded people” — then tossed it anyway, citing privacy concerns. The pair still face trial August 31, but without their own recorded words, prosecutors are fighting with both hands tied behind their backs.
The court bombshell arrives against a backdrop of documented, systemic Jew-hatred spreading through Australian healthcare like an infection since the October 7 Hamas massacre.
Doctors and nurses have shown up to work wearing “From the river to the sea” insignia. Hospital corridors and toilet stalls have been wallpapered with anti-Israel stickers. A Jewish ICU nurse quit after more than a decade on the job because management refused to act. A Jewish woman receiving cancer treatment suspects a nurse deliberately botched her IV four times, leaving her bruised for weeks — only connecting the dots after the Bankstown nurses story broke.
A Melbourne mother called a suicide hotline after learning two cousins were murdered in a Hamas kibbutz attack — and the counselor scolded her for not expressing enough sympathy for Gaza.
A conference on lifesaving gunshot wound treatment — techniques forged on actual battlefields — was canceled after anti-Israel medical workers threatened mass protests. Weeks later, a terrorist attacked Bondi Beach.
Meanwhile, activists, influencers, and pro-Palestine medical groups—including the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network—have mobilized to pressure Australia’s healthcare regulator, AHPRA. The coordinated campaign demands that the agency revoke its recent decision to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of antisemitism.
The dying man at The Alfred Hospital had no one to protect him from the vile antisemitism he was forced to see before he died.
It’s no surprise.
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