It was at that point - as children nearby became increasingly scared - the man began speaking to a woman with Mr Abou-eid in a headscarf.
"Piss off you s***. Get your f***ing b**** out of the f***ing story," he can be heard on the confronting video, which Mr Abou-eid posted on Facebook.
The phone was almost knocked from Mr Abou-eid's hand by the man when he threw a punch at him.
The video has already been viewed tens-of-thousands of times.
In a message posted with the video, Mr Abou-eid said the man was "definitely a Pauline Hanson supporter" and was sorry young kids had been exposed to "such a filthy racist".
n the video he referred to the man as a "typical Australian" before clarifying his comments.
"I apologise for using the term Typical Australian, I consider myself Australian as I was born in this country and very proud to be Australian. When you have an idiot throwing racial abuse at you and your kids you don't really have the time to really think about what you say. Typical racist Australian would have been more of the right thing to say. I apologise if this has offended some people."
Mr Abou-eid told The Herald Sun it wasn't the first time his family had been subjected to racial abuse, but it was the worst.
"We just want people to be tolerant and stand against these people," he said.
Police were called to the park and took the man away.