Cartoonist Cathy Wilcox has lashed out after the newspaper she works for apologised for publishing a cartoon that outraged Jewish leaders and politicians in the wake of the Bondi Beach massacre.
Jewish and political leaders denounced the cartoon as deeply offensive, saying it mocked genuine calls for accountability.
Following the backlash, the Nine-owned mastheads issued a rare public apology.
‘Wilcox cartoon was divisive – and we apologise for the hurt it has caused,’ an editorial published on Sunday read.
‘Many of our readers found the cartoon thought-provoking. It is undeniable, however, that many others in the community, particularly Jews, were deeply hurt and offended by it. We have heard their distress and for this pain, we sincerely apologise.’
Nine suggested Wilcox never intended to cause harm.
‘Wilcox’s intention was to scrutinise the almost immediate politicisation following the horrific attack at Bondi,’ the editorial said.
Cathy Wilcox (above) has lashed out after the newspaper she works for apologised for publishing her cartoon that outraged Jewish leaders and politicians in the wake of the Bondi Beach massacre
But within hours of the apology being published, Wilcox appeared to undermine it – jumping into a heated debate on the left-leaning platform BlueSky and questioning the paper’s integrity for backing down.
One man, posting under the name Rosco The Grouch and claiming to be a retired secondary school teacher, dismissed the apology to Jewish Australians as ‘Simpering. Sycophantic. Blather.’
‘So much for the once great SMH. Maybe (Cathy Wilcox) ought to consider joining a paper that has some integrity.’
Ms Wilcox responded bluntly: ‘Do you know of any?’
She later suggested she may publicly release abusive messages she has received.
‘When this blows over I might have to share some of the emails I’ve received over the days which really make me wonder why I am the one accused of hatred,’ she wrote.
‘There is deep unresolved trauma being spewed by some of these people and we cannot consent to living according to their warped reality.’
When contacted by Sky News about the comments, Ms Wilcox doubled down – launching a furious tirade against the network.
Within hours of the apology being published, Ms Wilcox joined a fiery debate on the left-leaning platform BlueSky, appearing to imply the apology itself was a failure of integrity
‘Why in God’s name do you think I would answer the questions of Murdoch’s petty little propaganda operation, to give them more fuel for their campaign of hatred?’ she said.
‘The irony of me having to answer to charges of hatred when your grubby outfit gives not one shit about what you do to people you target.
‘Remind the boss about how much they cared about free speech when one of theirs was in the spotlight. Political correctness gone mad, eh? You and your hit squad goons can f*** right off.’
Before Nine Newspapers issued the apology, Anti-Defamation Commission chair Dr Dvir Abramovich said the cartoon portrayed Australians calling for a Royal Commission as ‘a fraud.’
‘Not misguided. Not mistaken. But staged. Artificial,’ he said.
‘Elevated on a platform they did not build, carried by unseen forces beneath them, and most critically kept in rhythm by an external drummer, visually coded as the Israeli Prime Minister.
‘The message is unmistakable: this is not a genuine civic impulse. It is a performance. A chorus dancing to a foreign beat.’
Former Northern Territory senator and Olympic gold medallist Nova Peris on Friday labelled the cartoon ‘pathetic’.
Anti-Defamation Commission Chair Dr Dvir Abramovich said the cartoon presented ‘a movement of Australians calling for a royal commission as a fraud’
Former Northern Territory senator and Olympic gold medallist Nova Peris on Friday labelled the cartoon ‘pathetic’
‘Many of us spoke publicly after this national tragedy out of a commitment to justice and a determination to confront terrorism, not excuse it,’ she said.
‘To portray Australians from across professions who call for accountability as agents of Jews or Israel is vile, dehumanising, and deeply insulting to families who watched their loved ones and innocent people hunted with military-grade weapons by Islamist terrorists.
‘These families did not lose loved ones to a cartoon. They lost them to real violence. Real hatred. Real evil. Here. On our shores. At our iconic Bondi Beach.’
Peris warned ‘mockery’ of the violent event only worked to insinuate ‘Jewish suffering is exaggerated, manipulated, or politically manufactured’.
‘For centuries, Jews were depicted as schemers and manipulators, as bribers, controllers, subhuman caricatures blamed even for their own deaths. These lies were never harmless. They created permission. And permission led to violence,’ she said.
‘This cartoon sits squarely in that tradition.
‘It mocks the dead, grieving families, and Australians who stand up by portraying calls for accountability as obedience, corruption, and manipulation.
‘Mockery in the face of terror is not political insight. It is moral collapse. History has seen this before. And it never ends well.’

