
Joint Faith Leaders’ Letter on Religious Freedom and the ‘Combatting Antisemitism and Extremism Bill 2026’
16 January, 2026
The Hon. Anthony Albanese MP
Prime Minister
Parliament House
CANBERRA ACT 2600
cc: The Hon. Tony Burke MP
Minister for Home Affairs
cc: The Hon. Michelle Rowland MP
Attorney-General of Australia
Dear Prime Minister, Minister, and Attorney-General,
We write this open letter jointly as leaders of faith communities in Australia to reaffirm our shared commitment to opposing antisemitism, racial and religious hatred, and extremism in all their forms. We unequivocally condemn the recent terror attacks in Bondi. Such acts of violence are rejected by all faith communities, and we extend our deepest sympathies to all the victims of this terrible crime.
As faith leaders, we write out of a shared responsibility for the long-term vitality of Australia’s democratic, multi-faith, and multicultural society. Our intention is not to deny the reality of racial and religious hate or the need to address it, but to raise principled concerns about protecting the fundamental freedoms that underpin trust, cohesion, and peaceful coexistence for all Australians.
We wish to express serious concern regarding the Combatting Antisemitism Hate and Extremism Bill 2026, both because of its (perhaps unintended) adverse implications for religious freedom and freedom of expression and the inadequate consultation and review.
Faith communities, legal experts, and civil society organisations have not been afforded a reasonable amount of time to properly study the legislation, assess its legal and constitutional implications, or prepare constructive and well-considered submissions for what has been described as the ‘most consequential change’ to Australia’s counterterrorism laws since 9/11.
Legislation of this breadth and sensitivity requires careful deliberation and meaningful consultation. A rushed legislative process of this nature undermines confidence, increases the risk of unintended consequences, and does not assist community unity or social cohesion.
As leaders across the range of faith communities in Australia, we have deep concerns about the Bill’s impact on religious freedom and freedom of expression.
These freedoms are not peripheral considerations. They are foundational to Australia’s constitutional framework, democratic culture, and the ability of faith communities to contribute positively and responsibly to public life. Religious freedom includes the right of individuals and communities to teach, preach, and express their beliefs openly and publicly, including through sermons, religious education, pastoral guidance, and moral commentary, even where those beliefs may be contested, unpopular, or misunderstood. Provided such expression does not incite physical harm or violence, it must be protected as a legitimate exercise of religious practice.
While we recognise the seriousness of antisemitism and all forms of hatred, and the responsibility of government to respond decisively to genuine threats, our concern lies with whether the measures proposed are proportionate, balanced, and consistent with equality before the law. Laws designed to combat hatred and extremism must be carefully limited to their proper purpose and not create unintended consequences and damage the social fabric.
We do not believe that the proposed new criminal offence of ‘Serious Racial Vilification’ (section 80.2BF) is appropriate and agree with the position of the NSW Law Reform Commission that such an offence ‘would introduce imprecision and subjectivity into the criminal law’ and that ‘this ambiguity makes hatred an inappropriate standard for the criminal law.’
The Bill does not provide clear and adequate protection for lawful religious teaching, sermons, theological instruction, pastoral guidance, and good-faith religious expression. Furthermore, we are alarmed by the prospect that the government might, in order to win the support of minority parties in the parliament, make section 80.2BF even worse by removing the ‘religious texts’ exemptions and extending the scope to include other protected attributes. At a time when we should be coming together as a nation, this would be the worst possible outcome for social cohesion.
It would be inconsistent with the Prime Minister’s pre-election promise to faith leaders that ‘legal protections for people of faith will not go backwards under Labor’ as well as his commitment to progress religious protections in a bipartisan manner with the Coalition.
Faith leaders have previously signalled their support for the Serious Religious Vilification provisions in the government’s proposed Religious Discrimination Bill 2024. We urge the government to remove section 80.2BF from the Combatting Antisemitism Hate and Extremism Bill 2026 and to address the issue of serious religious vilification based on this model.
We are also concerned by the risks created by the different thresholds of criminality in the Bill, often based on different and conflicting uses of terms like hate and hatred. ‘Hate’ is an imprecise term with a range of meanings in different contexts, and its presence is perceived differently by different people. It may be useful as a shorthand in public debate, but not as a term on which criminal liability depends. As a general policy, expression may be appropriately criminalised where it is used to incite or threaten physical violence against a person or a group, but it is dangerous to criminalise expression just because a person or group feels intimidated, harassed, hated or threatened.
An overbroad definition of ‘hate crimes’ is used to determine whether a group can be listed as a prohibited hate group. ‘Hate crimes’ as defined need not be crimes at all – which is a seriously misleading use of language. Compounding this, the provisions allow past lawful speech or expression to be deemed as hate crimes, which may expose individuals or institutions to consequences based on past lawful speech or expression. Religious sermons, lectures, educational resources, and interfaith materials are often publicly recorded and shared. In the absence of clear protection against retrospective or quasi-retrospective consequences, faith leaders and institutions are left unable to confidently order their conduct according to the law.
We are ready to work with the Government to improve the Bill to remove unintended consequences and overreach while achieving the aims of combatting antisemitism and racial and religious hatred. But we need more time. We therefore respectfully urge the Government to delay the introduction of the Bill to allow for an adequate consultation period, and to engage directly and meaningfully with faith communities to get the right balance in this legislation.
Australia’s strength lies in its ability to protect both public safety and fundamental freedoms. Measures intended to combat hate should reinforce trust, fairness, and inclusion, not weaken them. Faith communities have long played a positive role in education, social services, humanitarian response, and interfaith understanding. Preserving the space for lawful religious expression is essential to maintaining that contribution.
We offer these views in a constructive spirit and stand ready to engage further with all parties to develop appropriate amendments to ensure an appropriate legislative response to hatred and extremism.
Yours sincerely
The Rt Rev Dr Michael Stead
Bishop of South Sydney
Anglican Diocese of Sydney
On behalf of:
Imam Shadi Alsuleiman
President, Australian National Imams Council
Most Rev’d Kanishka Raffel
Archbishop, Anglican Diocese of Sydney
Most Rev Anthony Fisher OP
Archbishop of Sydney, Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney
Archbishop Makarios
Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church of Australia
Archbishop Antoine-Charbel Tarabay
Maronite Archdiocese of Australia, New Zealand and Oceania
Mark Edwards
Religious Freedom Representative, Australian Christian Churches
Rev David Burke
President, Presbyterian Church of Australia
Rev Mark Wilson
National Ministries Director, Australian Baptist Churches
Dr Brendan Pratt
President, Seventh-day Adventist Church in Australia
His Grace, Bishop Daniel
Coptic Orthodox Church, Diocese of Sydney & Affiliated Regions
Gawaine Powell Davies
Buddhist Council of NSW
Dr Ali Al Samail
CEO, Australian Ahl Al Bait Islamic Centre
Bishop Robert Rabbat
Melkite Eparchy of Australia and New Zealand
Dr Karanjeet Sandhu
Australian Sikh Association
Archbishop Amel Nona
Chaldean Catholic Diocese in Australia and New Zealand
Abdullah Khan
President, Islamic Schools Association of Australia
Metropolitan Basilios Kodseie
Anthiochian Orthodox Archdiocese of Australia and New Zealand
Bishop Georges Casmoussa
Apostolic Visitor, Syriac Catholic Community in Australia
Most Rev. Mor Malatius Malki
Metropolitan Archbishop of the Syrian Orthodox Church
Rev David King
Moderator, Presbyterian Church of NSW
Rev Dr Steve Bartlett
Director of Ministries, NSW & ACT Baptist Churches
Rev. Fr. Andrawes Faraj
St Mark’s Coptic Catholic Church
Mike Southon
Executive Director, Freedom for Faith
Ross Clifford
Executive Director, NSW Council of Churches
Rev Ken Graham
President, Christian Missionary Alliance
Mark Sneddon
Executive Director, Institute for Civil Society
Sei Kato
Director of Public Affairs, Church of Scientology Australia
___
Republished with thanks to Freedom for Faith. Image courtesy of Adobe.
4 Comments
Leave A Comment
Recent Articles:
17 June 2026
2.4 MINS
Family First’s National Director Lyle Shelton described Sarah Game as “one of the strongest and most courageous advocates for families in any Australian parliament”.
17 June 2026
4.6 MINS
New Zealand First leader Winston Peters has refused demands to apologise, delete posts, or donate to a LGBT+ activist group, stating that they are “on the wrong side of history” in a viral post that has been viewed over 1.7 million times in less than one day.
17 June 2026
3.1 MINS
Egypt’s June 15 “terrorism” trial of Said Mansour Rezk was adjourned until September 6. His Australian fiancée Sophie says “our prayers pulled through a miracle.”
17 June 2026
4 MINS
Trump is calling it peace. Iran is calling it progress. History suggests it's neither.
17 June 2026
4.1 MINS
Nation First looks into One Nation’s powerful new video, the anger it has tapped into, and why Pauline Hanson’s rise is starting to look less like a protest and more like a political earthquake.
16 June 2026
4.5 MINS
Comedian Dave Hughes has unleashed on the Albanese Government, arguing there was no mandate for the recent tax changes and regretting voting for Labor at the last election.
16 June 2026
2.7 MINS
The South Australian Parliament is set to debate a private members bill that — if passed — will allow a biological man who identifies as a woman to record himself as the “mother” on the child’s birth certificate. It has already passed the Upper House with support from the Greens and Labor.






This is so wonderful.
Christians, Catholics, Muslims, Sikhs, Buddhists and Scientologists all pushing back against Zionist over-reach.
The battle lines have been drawn.
Let’s hope that we get this Bill scuttled and it is abandoned altogether.
Here’s the crux of this letter as quoted above: ” We respectfully urge the Government to delay the introduction of the Bill to allow for an adequate consultation period, and to engage directly and meaningfully with faith communities to get the right balance in this legislation.
Clear, sensible and fair.
Interesting.
So the Muslims in the letter say…
“We write this open letter jointly as leaders of faith communities in Australia to reaffirm our shared commitment to opposing antisemitism, racial and religious hatred, and extremism in all their forms.”
Yet their very own Quran says..
Tasfir Surah Al Ma’Idah 51
“Allah forbids His believing servants from having Jews and Christians as friends, because they are the enemies of Islam and its people, may Allah curse them. Allah then states that they are friends of each other and He gives a warning threat to those who do this,”
“And you had already known about those who transgressed among you concerning the Sabbath, and We said to them, ‘Be apes, despised.’” (Quran 2:65) (13)
Tasfir Surah An-Nisa 155
“You will fight the Jews and will kill them, until the stone will say, `O Muslim! There is a Jew here, so come and kill him.'”
Their own Quran is antisemitic.
The extremists and terrorists don’t just pluck their ideas to murder Jews out of thin air! They don’t go reading books written by Nazis on Jewish hatred and act upon those! It comes from somewhere, some teaching and it doesn’t take much intelligence to figure out from where.
Don’t be fooled by them. They’ll say anything to non Muslims.
https://www.brightworkresearch.com/the-islamic-requirement-to-perform-taqiyya-and-lie-to-non-muslims/
You’re right JD. And you make a good point re: the Muslims.
Can I also say that our text, the NT is of a similar tone. For example,
What did Jesus say?
I know that you are descendants of Abraham; yet you seek to kill me, because my word finds no place in you. I speak of what I have seen with my Father, and you do what you have heard from your father. They answered him, “Abraham is our father.” Jesus said to them, “If you were Abraham’s children, you would do what Abraham did. … You are of your father the devil, and your will is to do your father’s desires. He was a murderer from the beginning, and has nothing to do with the truth, because there is no truth in him.
And how about Paul?
For you, brothers and sisters, became imitators of the churches of God in Christ Jesus that are in Judea, for you suffered the same things from your own compatriots as they did from the Jews, who killed both the Lord Jesus and the prophets, and drove us out; they displease God and oppose everyone by hindering us from speaking to the Gentiles so that they may be saved. Thus they have constantly been filling up the measure of their sins; but God’s wrath has overtaken them at last.
Interestingly, this is why many of the writers here on DD never quote Jesus or Paul. They are ‘Christians’ who are stuck in the OT. Funny that. They profess to be Christians but don’t quote from the NT. And when they ever so rarely do, it’s only ever an NT quote from the OT anyway.
So while you say the Quran is arguably antisemitic, so is arguably the NT.
Jesus described the Jews as the synagogue of Satan.