2024 Melbourne synagogue attack
On 6 December 2024, at approximately 4:10 am local time, an arson terrorist attack took place at the Adass Israel Synagogue of Melbourne in Ripponlea, a suburb of Melbourne, Australia. The resulting fire injured one member of the synagogue and caused significant damage to the building. Investigation of the attack was assigned to the Australian Federal Police's counter-terrorism unit. On 9 December 2024, Victoria Police stated the incident was being treated as a terrorist attack. The perpetrators of the attack reportedly used an accelerant and followed by spreading that throughout the interior of the building with a broom before lighting the accelerant fluid.
On 26 August 2025, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced that ASIO have determined Iran was allegedly involved in planning the attack. The attack was one of multiple 2024 Iranian operations inside Australia.
Background
Adass Israel Synagogue
The targeted synagogue in the December 2024 attack was the Orthodox Adass Israel Synagogue of Melbourne, located in Ripponlea, Victoria. It was built in 1965, designed by Ernest Fooks, and opened on 19 September 1965. It is part of the Adass Israel Congregation, a Jewish group in Melbourne that traces its origins to a split in the Elwood Talmud Torah Hebrew Congregation in 1939/1940. Some of its early members were boys and men who had been sent to Australia by the British on the infamous Dunera in 1941.According to Philip Zajac, President of the Jewish Community Council of Victoria, the Adass Israel congregation is apolitical with regards to the State of Israel.
When the sounding electoral boundaries were reviewed, one of the discussion papers presented stated that "Adass Israel’s political interests differ considerably in many ways" compared to neighbouring Jewish communities in Melbourne, and "Of particular note is the non-Zionist nature of the Adass Israel community; indeed it has ties to groups that are openly anti-Zionist".
The Synagogue was previously vandalised in 1989, and it was severely damaged in an arson attack on 1 January 1995.
The synagogue had last been the subject of an arson in 1995, in which all the Torah scrolls were kept safe from the fire. In that case, police did not find any evidence that antisemitism or racism motivated the crime.
Elsewhere in Australia
The 2024 arson attack at Adass Israel Synagogue took place in a period where the Australian Government's National Terrorism Threat Level was at probable after being raised in August 2024, indicating that there is a greater than 50% chance of a terrorist attack or attack planning taking place in Australia's near future. The threat level had previously been at probable level since shortly after November 2015's Paris terror attacks until 2022 when it was lowered to possible.Following the Gaza war succeeding the October 7 attacks, vandalism and intimidation directed at synagogues occurred at various locations in Australia.
In an incident occurring on 8 October 2023, in New South Wales, two individuals walked past a synagogue and shouted “Allahu Akbar”, before saying that they would “blow up the synagogue”. On 11 October 2023, in Melbourne, a synagogue received a bomb threat. On 23 November 2023, in Western Australia, an individual threw two glasses of red paint at a synagogue. In December 2023, hoax bomb threats were made to several synagogues across Australia. On 26 November 2024, a Chabad synagogue in St Kilda, Melbourne was vandalised with pro-Palestinian and antisemitic graffiti.
Attack
In the early hours of 6 December 2024, two masked men entered the Adass Israel Synagogue of Melbourne in Ripponlea. The men began pouring an accelerant on the floor and spreading it throughout the interior of the building with a broom when they were disturbed by a congregant who was attending the synagogue. The two perpetrators set the accelerant alight just before 4:10 am and fled the scene in a stolen Volkswagen Golf. The fire spread quickly causing extensive damage to the inside of the synagogue and collapsing part of the roof. One member of the synagogue sustained minor injuries to his hands in the fire.Dozens of emergency service crews, including 65 firefighters, were called to Synagogue shortly after the blaze first started. Firefighters spent more than an hour containing the blaze. A crime scene was established after the fire had been put out and members of the synagogue where allowed to enter in the afternoon of 6 December 2024 to retrieve the Torah scrolls, holy books, tallits, tefillin, other artefacts and some personal items.
Aftermath
On 9 December, in the wake of the synagogue attack, the AFP established Taskforce Avalite to investigate antisemitism in Australia. The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation also announced it would be assisting the taskforce in its investigation. Following the incident, police in Canberra increased patrols around synagogues in the nation's capital. The Sydney Jewish community organised a demonstration on 15 December 2024, at Martin Place, protesting the Australian government's inadequate response to antisemitism. On 17 December 2024, Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan announced new measures impacting public protests as part of an effort to prevent antisemitic behaviour. The proposed laws would establish safe access in close proximity to places of worship and prohibit disturbances of religious gatherings. There are ongoing investigations on some of the reported antisemitic attacks. Anthony Albanese suggested that the attacks may have involved actors without ideological commitment being funded externally.Arrests
On 16 July 2025, the Victorian Joint Counter Terrorism Team arrested and charged a 20-year-old man in Williamstown over the theft of the blue Volkswagen Golf used in the arson attack. The Golf had previously been used in another arson attack at the Lux nightclub in South Yarra in November 2024 and an arson and shooting in Bundoora on the same night as the synagogue attack.Two men had been arrested previously in relation to the Lux nightclub fire on 15 May 2025, with a police spokesperson indicating after the arrest, that the two men were not directly involved in the synagogue attack and that the arson attack at Lux nightclub was not a political attack.
Misinformation and conspiracy theories
Following the attack, Antoun Issa, a former Guardian Australia journalist and chief of staff to Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi, made conspiratorial claims that the attack may have been a "false flag" perpetrated by Zionists. Issa was reportedly reprimanded for his comments and was counselled over the statement. A similar conspiratorial statement blaming a Jewish conspiracy for the attack was made by Wissam Haddad, an Islamic preacher in Sydney who previously came under public scrutiny for antisemitic remarks. The preacher's statement was criticised by the New South Wales Premier, Chris Minns.Continued targeting of Australian synagogues
The targeting of Australian synagogues continued after the Melbourne incident with the Southern Sydney Synagogue in Allawah vandalised on 10 January 2025. The Southern Sydney Synagogue was previously firebombed in 1991. On 11 January 2025, the Newtown Synagogue in Sydney's Inner West was vandalised, with the arsonists also attempting to set the synagogue on fire.On 4 July 2025, an unknown perpetrator attempted to set East Melbourne Hebrew Congregation on fire by pouring a flammable liquid on the entrance and igniting it.