Major Australian Arts Festival Cancels Key Event Amid Outcry Over Exclusion of Palestinian Author

Greace Nunez Correspondent

graciela--nunez@hotmail.com | 2026-01-13 21:05:32

(C) The Guardian


ADELAIDE, Australia – The Adelaide Festival (AF), Australia’s premier arts and cultural event, announced on Tuesday the cancellation of its centerpiece "Writers’ Week" following a massive boycott by international authors. The crisis erupted after the festival board rescinded an invitation to a Palestinian-Australian academic, sparking a fierce debate over free speech and anti-Semitism in the wake of a recent domestic terror attack.

A Board Resigns Amid Mounting Pressure
In an extraordinary statement released on January 13, the AF Board of Directors announced not only the cancellation of the literary event but also their collective resignation. The board offered a "sincere apology," acknowledging that their decision to disinvite Dr. Randa Abdel-Fattah, a sociology professor at Macquarie University, had "caused deeper division" rather than the cultural sensitivity they intended.

"Due to the significant number of authors who withdrew from the program in protest, we have determined that we cannot proceed with the event as planned," the statement read.

The Spark: A Social Media Post and a Terror Context
The controversy began on January 8, when the board withdrew Dr. Abdel-Fattah's invitation over a 2024 social media post in which she called for the "end of this Zionist colony."

The festival initially justified the move by citing the "unprecedented sensitivity" of the current climate. Australia is currently reeling from a mass shooting on December 14 at Bondi Beach, where ISIS-inspired gunmen targeted a Jewish festival, resulting in 15 deaths. While the board clarified they did not link Dr. Abdel-Fattah to the tragedy, they argued her presence would be "culturally insensitive" during a period of heightened government crackdowns on anti-Semitic rhetoric.

Global Authors Stand in Solidarity
Dr. Abdel-Fattah vehemently denounced the exclusion as "vile and shameless anti-Palestinian racism," accusing the board of attempting to smear her by association with the Bondi Beach attack.

The response from the global literary community was swift. Over 180 high-profile figures—including Pulitzer Prize winner Percival Everett, acclaimed British novelist Zadie Smith, former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, and former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis—announced a boycott of the festival.

The final blow came when Louise Adler, the Director of Writers’ Week and daughter of Holocaust survivors, resigned in protest. Writing for The Guardian, Adler warned that succumbing to political pressure undermines democratic institutions. "The efforts of pro-Israel lobbyists to suppress even the mildest criticism are having a chilling effect on freedom of expression," she stated.

A Nation Divided
The cancellation highlights the deepening polarization within Australia as the government balances national security and the protection of minority groups against the fundamental right to political dissent. The Adelaide Festival, scheduled to run from February 27 to March 15, will proceed with its music and theater programs, but the absence of its literary crown jewel remains a somber reminder of the ongoing cultural tensions.

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