The Stutchbury Sessions
Subscribe to The Stutchbury Sessions on Apple [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-stutchbury-sessions/id1704929503], Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/0eQtJ5hQnFbb0rBEXUH8Vy], Amazon [https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/471ac560-3a67-4eb7-941d-8173868ec95d/the-stutchbury-sessions], iHeartRadio [https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1323-the-stutchbury-sessions-141121135/], PlayerFM [https://player.fm/series/3546144] or listen in your browser [https://thestutchburysessions.podbean.com/]. In this episode of The Stutchbury Sessions, host Michael Stutchbury reflects on his recent conversation with Sir Frank Lowy — the 95-year-old founder of the Westfield shopping centre empire and one of Australia’s most successful 20th-century immigrants. Speaking from his Sydney home ahead of returning to Israel, Sir Frank offered a rare and emotional perspective on the country that gave him refuge and opportunity — and the unease he now feels about the rise of antisemitism in Australia. “I am 95 years old and came here when I was 21, and I prospered, and people prospered with me,” he said. “Now I am at an absolute loss to describe what has happened to Australia.” To learn more about our research in this area, please click here: https://www.cis.org.au/publication/the-new-intolerance-antisemitism-and-religious-hatred-in-a-fracturing-civic-compact/ [https://www.cis.org.au/publication/the-new-intolerance-antisemitism-and-religious-hatred-in-a-fracturing-civic-compact/]
8 episodios
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