Avi Yemini | |
---|---|
![]() Yemini at the Park Hotel,10 January 2022 | |
Born | Avraham Shalom Waks
[1] 17 October 1985 [2] [3] [4] |
Nationality | Australian, Israeli |
Citizenship |
|
Education | Yeshivah College, Melbourne [1] |
Occupations |
|
Employer | Rebel News (since 2020) |
Political party | Liberty Alliance (2018–2019) [1] [5] |
Military career | |
Allegiance | ![]() |
Service/ | ![]() |
Years of service | 2004–2007 |
Unit | Golani Brigade |
Part of a series on |
Far-right politics in Australia |
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Avraham Shalom Yemini ( né Waks; born 17 October 1985) is an Australian-Israeli far-right political activist. [6] From 2020 onwards he has worked as the Australian correspondent for Rebel News, a Canadian far-right website. [1] [7]
Yemini was born in Melbourne, Victoria to Zephaniah (formerly Stephen) and Hava Waks, [8] and grew up in the Melbourne suburb of St Kilda East. [1] He is one of seventeen children. [1] One of his elder siblings is Manny Waks. [4]
Yemini attended Yeshivah College, and was later sent to ultra-Orthodox schools in the U.S., Israel and Brazil. He returned to Melbourne when he was 16, and subsequently became addicted to heroin. He spent the next two years in rehab, foster homes and crisis care. [1]
Yemini joined the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) when he was 19, in an effort to straighten out. [1] He served with the IDF's Golani Brigade from 2005 until 2008. Most of his active duty was spent along the border of the Gaza Strip. [9]
After returning to Australia, Yemini opened his first IDF gym in Caulfield, Victoria, followed by a second in Melbourne's CBD in 2016. [10] [11] In 2018, Yemeni sold the gyms. [1]
On 4 March 2018, Yemini joined the Australian Liberty Alliance to run as a candidate for the Southern Metropolitan Region at the 2018 Victorian state election. [12] He was unsuccessful, receiving 0.49% of the vote. [13] Through the party and his collaboration with Tommy Robinson and Rebel News, he has been affiliated with the counter-jihad movement. [14]
In August 2022, Yemini was denied entry to New Zealand due to his 2019 criminal conviction for assaulting his ex-wife. [15] Yemini claimed the decision was due to an article in The New Zealand Herald that described him and fellow content creator Rukshan Fernando as "Australian conspiracy commentators". [16] [17] Yemini was allowed entry to New Zealand in 2023. [18]
In April 2016, the Facebook page for Yemini's gym was banned for three days for sharing an antisemitic post with the hashtag "saynotoracism". Yemini said he had shared the post to raise awareness of the intolerance faced by the Jewish community. [9]
In August 2018, Yemini's main Facebook page was banned for hate speech violations. The decision came after Yemini posted the personal phone number of journalist Osman Faruqi, resulting in Faruqi receiving abusive messages and death threats from Yemini's followers. [19] [20]
In September 2020, two of Yemini's Facebook pages were banned following inquiries by Gizmodo Australia. [20] As of February 2021, Yemini was posting anti-vaccine and anti-lockdown content on Facebook. [21]
Yemini has described himself as a "proud Zionist". [22] He has described himself as "proudly anti-Islam", Islam as a "barbaric ideology", and Muslim countries as "Islamic shitholes". [23] At a 2018 demonstration against the imprisonment of Tommy Robinson, Yemini declared himself to be "the world's proudest Jewish Nazi". [16]
In 2016, one of Yemini's brothers, Manny Waks, sued him for defamation after he claimed that Waks and their father were harbouring a known paedophile in the family home. [24] Waks dropped the lawsuit after Yemini apologised a few months later. [1]
In July 2019, Yemini admitted to throwing a chopping board that hit his former wife on her forehead in 2016. He also pleaded guilty to using a carriage service to harass by sending abusive text messages to her, and one charge of breaching an intervention order relating to a video of a man. Yemini's lawyer argued he had not meant to hit her. [25] [26]
In 2021, Yemini took legal action against three Victorian parliamentary officials − including former Legislative Assembly speaker Colin Brooks − after he was denied media accreditation in July of that year. [27] Yemini subsequently lost the case. [28]
In 2023, Yemini sued Facebook fact-checker RMIT FactLab for labeling Rebel News content as "misleading". The case was dismissed as he had "failed to make any formal inquiries via appropriate channels with relevant persons". [29]
Yemini lives in Berwick, Victoria with his wife, a hairdresser. They met at a coffee shop in 2018. [1]
In 2015, he established Rebel Media, a far-right outlet that regularly features global and domestic "stars" of the nationalist movement.
Far-right Twitter accounts come and go, often generating significant traction without any obvious relation to organised movements. As a stage of his reinvention of self after the EDL, its leader Stephen Yaxley-Lennon ('Tommy Robinson') reinvented himself as a journalist, working for the Canadian far-right media company Rebel Media.
The Rebel Media, a far-right news organization, published articles by Canadian alt-right propagandists such as: "Want to sop cultural Marxist indoctrination? Cut public funding of universities" (Nicholas 2017); "Social justice is socialism in disguise" ( Goldy 2016); and "How progressives use our kids for Marxist social experiments" (Goldy 2017).
Far-right Canadian media outlets, for instance, have bombarded its subscribers with all kinds of pro-Trump, racist and xenophobic dialogue, both before and after Trump's victory. Rebel Media, a popular far-right online media platform run by Ezra Levant, a controversial Canadian far-right political activist, writer and broadcaster, has been an outright supporter of Trump, publishing countless extreme-right leaning articles on why to support him.
Beyond US-based far-right news websites such as Breitbart, Infowars and Epoch Times, other alternative online media outlets include Australia-based XYZ and The Unshackled, Canada-based Rebel News and UK-based Politicalite.com and PoliticalUK.co.uk, just to name a few, which operate as far-right metapolitical channels and counter-publics that strive to influence mainstream culture and discourse (Holt, 2019).
All four, including Robinson himself, were employees of The Rebel Media, a Toronto-based far-right website.
Jack Posobiec, a journalist with the far-right news outlet The Rebel, was the first to use the hashtag with a link to the hacked documents online, which was then shared more widely by WikiLeaks.
With politicians including Conservative heavyweights Andrew Scheer and Brian Jean swearing off appearances and a raft of exits by prominent contributors, Ezra Levant's far-right video and commentary network The Rebel spent the last week in damage control, trying to distance itself from the extremist alt-right movement whose values many have alleged the site's content too often sympathized with.
Avi Yemini | |
---|---|
![]() Yemini at the Park Hotel,10 January 2022 | |
Born | Avraham Shalom Waks
[1] 17 October 1985 [2] [3] [4] |
Nationality | Australian, Israeli |
Citizenship |
|
Education | Yeshivah College, Melbourne [1] |
Occupations |
|
Employer | Rebel News (since 2020) |
Political party | Liberty Alliance (2018–2019) [1] [5] |
Military career | |
Allegiance | ![]() |
Service/ | ![]() |
Years of service | 2004–2007 |
Unit | Golani Brigade |
Part of a series on |
Far-right politics in Australia |
---|
![]() |
Avraham Shalom Yemini ( né Waks; born 17 October 1985) is an Australian-Israeli far-right political activist. [6] From 2020 onwards he has worked as the Australian correspondent for Rebel News, a Canadian far-right website. [1] [7]
Yemini was born in Melbourne, Victoria to Zephaniah (formerly Stephen) and Hava Waks, [8] and grew up in the Melbourne suburb of St Kilda East. [1] He is one of seventeen children. [1] One of his elder siblings is Manny Waks. [4]
Yemini attended Yeshivah College, and was later sent to ultra-Orthodox schools in the U.S., Israel and Brazil. He returned to Melbourne when he was 16, and subsequently became addicted to heroin. He spent the next two years in rehab, foster homes and crisis care. [1]
Yemini joined the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) when he was 19, in an effort to straighten out. [1] He served with the IDF's Golani Brigade from 2005 until 2008. Most of his active duty was spent along the border of the Gaza Strip. [9]
After returning to Australia, Yemini opened his first IDF gym in Caulfield, Victoria, followed by a second in Melbourne's CBD in 2016. [10] [11] In 2018, Yemeni sold the gyms. [1]
On 4 March 2018, Yemini joined the Australian Liberty Alliance to run as a candidate for the Southern Metropolitan Region at the 2018 Victorian state election. [12] He was unsuccessful, receiving 0.49% of the vote. [13] Through the party and his collaboration with Tommy Robinson and Rebel News, he has been affiliated with the counter-jihad movement. [14]
In August 2022, Yemini was denied entry to New Zealand due to his 2019 criminal conviction for assaulting his ex-wife. [15] Yemini claimed the decision was due to an article in The New Zealand Herald that described him and fellow content creator Rukshan Fernando as "Australian conspiracy commentators". [16] [17] Yemini was allowed entry to New Zealand in 2023. [18]
In April 2016, the Facebook page for Yemini's gym was banned for three days for sharing an antisemitic post with the hashtag "saynotoracism". Yemini said he had shared the post to raise awareness of the intolerance faced by the Jewish community. [9]
In August 2018, Yemini's main Facebook page was banned for hate speech violations. The decision came after Yemini posted the personal phone number of journalist Osman Faruqi, resulting in Faruqi receiving abusive messages and death threats from Yemini's followers. [19] [20]
In September 2020, two of Yemini's Facebook pages were banned following inquiries by Gizmodo Australia. [20] As of February 2021, Yemini was posting anti-vaccine and anti-lockdown content on Facebook. [21]
Yemini has described himself as a "proud Zionist". [22] He has described himself as "proudly anti-Islam", Islam as a "barbaric ideology", and Muslim countries as "Islamic shitholes". [23] At a 2018 demonstration against the imprisonment of Tommy Robinson, Yemini declared himself to be "the world's proudest Jewish Nazi". [16]
In 2016, one of Yemini's brothers, Manny Waks, sued him for defamation after he claimed that Waks and their father were harbouring a known paedophile in the family home. [24] Waks dropped the lawsuit after Yemini apologised a few months later. [1]
In July 2019, Yemini admitted to throwing a chopping board that hit his former wife on her forehead in 2016. He also pleaded guilty to using a carriage service to harass by sending abusive text messages to her, and one charge of breaching an intervention order relating to a video of a man. Yemini's lawyer argued he had not meant to hit her. [25] [26]
In 2021, Yemini took legal action against three Victorian parliamentary officials − including former Legislative Assembly speaker Colin Brooks − after he was denied media accreditation in July of that year. [27] Yemini subsequently lost the case. [28]
In 2023, Yemini sued Facebook fact-checker RMIT FactLab for labeling Rebel News content as "misleading". The case was dismissed as he had "failed to make any formal inquiries via appropriate channels with relevant persons". [29]
Yemini lives in Berwick, Victoria with his wife, a hairdresser. They met at a coffee shop in 2018. [1]
In 2015, he established Rebel Media, a far-right outlet that regularly features global and domestic "stars" of the nationalist movement.
Far-right Twitter accounts come and go, often generating significant traction without any obvious relation to organised movements. As a stage of his reinvention of self after the EDL, its leader Stephen Yaxley-Lennon ('Tommy Robinson') reinvented himself as a journalist, working for the Canadian far-right media company Rebel Media.
The Rebel Media, a far-right news organization, published articles by Canadian alt-right propagandists such as: "Want to sop cultural Marxist indoctrination? Cut public funding of universities" (Nicholas 2017); "Social justice is socialism in disguise" ( Goldy 2016); and "How progressives use our kids for Marxist social experiments" (Goldy 2017).
Far-right Canadian media outlets, for instance, have bombarded its subscribers with all kinds of pro-Trump, racist and xenophobic dialogue, both before and after Trump's victory. Rebel Media, a popular far-right online media platform run by Ezra Levant, a controversial Canadian far-right political activist, writer and broadcaster, has been an outright supporter of Trump, publishing countless extreme-right leaning articles on why to support him.
Beyond US-based far-right news websites such as Breitbart, Infowars and Epoch Times, other alternative online media outlets include Australia-based XYZ and The Unshackled, Canada-based Rebel News and UK-based Politicalite.com and PoliticalUK.co.uk, just to name a few, which operate as far-right metapolitical channels and counter-publics that strive to influence mainstream culture and discourse (Holt, 2019).
All four, including Robinson himself, were employees of The Rebel Media, a Toronto-based far-right website.
Jack Posobiec, a journalist with the far-right news outlet The Rebel, was the first to use the hashtag with a link to the hacked documents online, which was then shared more widely by WikiLeaks.
With politicians including Conservative heavyweights Andrew Scheer and Brian Jean swearing off appearances and a raft of exits by prominent contributors, Ezra Levant's far-right video and commentary network The Rebel spent the last week in damage control, trying to distance itself from the extremist alt-right movement whose values many have alleged the site's content too often sympathized with.