I still remember the quiet excitement of boarding the bus that would take my wife and me to Bondi Beach that fall of 2023. We were in Sydney on a learning trip with the board of the Association of Government Internal Auditors Inc. and I had insisted that we visit Bondi on one of our free days.
I wanted to see the place not because it was iconic, but because it already felt familiar. I had seen it often on television, through episodes featuring the beach lifeguards, where danger seemed contained, professionalism prevailed and the shoreline always returned to calm.
That sense of familiarity stayed with me long after we had left. Bondi was never a place of deep personal memory; I was there for barely an hour. But it lodged itself in my imagination as a space of order and ease, a public place where risk was acknowledged yet managed, where safety felt almost rehearsed.
When news broke of the shooting at Bondi earlier this week, it was not the violence itself that struck first, but the collision between memory and reality. A place I had casually filed under “safe” had been breached. Distance, both geographic and emotional, offered no real insulation. What happened there did not feel far away at all.
We like to believe that danger belongs elsewhere. That violence is a function of geography, culture, or circumstance we can neatly separate ourselves from. Moments like this unsettle that belief. They remind us that public spaces are not merely physical locations, but moral agreements. We step onto beaches, malls, trains and streets with an unspoken trust that they will hold. When that trust is broken, it is not only bodies that are harmed, but the shared sense of order.
Almost immediately, another pattern emerges. Before facts are settled and before grief has space to breathe, narratives rush in. Some acts of violence are treated as isolated criminality, while others are quickly loaded with ideology, identity, and collective blame. Meaning is imposed faster than understanding. Suspicion often moves more quickly than restraint.
There is no moral framework, Islamic or otherwise, that justifies indiscriminate violence against the innocent. What was violated in Bondi was not only the law, but the basic premise of safety itself. Those harmed were not threats, nor participants in conflict. They were people going about their lives in a space designed to protect them, a setting many associate with the openness and ease of everyday Australian life.
Moments like this expose not only how quickly fear fills the vacuum after violence, but how urgently societies need ideas sturdy enough to resist it. The impulse to attach ideology to violence often arrives long before certainty does.
Nearly four decades on, Muslim Democracy endures not as a rebuttal to the present moment, but as one longstanding example of patient civic thinking — an approach shaped for societies that must live with difference long after the noise subsides. Its relevance lies not in offering answers to crises, but in insisting that understanding is never finished, only practiced.
In the end, what is tested in moments like this is not only our systems, but our instincts. Extremes offer simple answers, quick blame, and false clarity. Moderation asks more of us. It demands understanding, restraint and the discipline to live with difference without turning it into division.
The ideologies worth holding onto are those built for endurance rather than dominance, for coexistence rather than certainty. My thoughts and prayers remain with those directly affected and with a community learning how to feel safe again.