Sunday, May 3, 2026

OMNI Antisemitism Anthology #1 MAY 22, 2026

 

OMNI

Antisemitism Anthology #1

MAY 22, 2026

Compiled by Dick Bennett for a Culture of Peace, Justice,  Ecology, Democracy

https://omnicenter.org/donate

 

What’s at Stake:  Legitimate criticism in the US of Israel’s behavior is being causally linked to anti-Semitic violence and used to criminalize pro-Palestinian speech.

CONTENTS
CRITICISM OF ISRAEL IS NOT ANTI-SEMITISM
Caitlin Johnston.  “Dissecting an ‘Antisemitic’ Psyop.”
David Spero.   Contrived charges of antisemitism are the new ‘Red Scare’.”
 Lifting the Curtain on Antisemitism.  PRA
Jonathan Kuttab.  Antisemitic Bigotry in Us.
Robert Cohen.  Importance of Definitions: Ditch the IHRA Definition.
Genocide and Holocaust Studies Crises Network v. IHRA Definition.
Michael Felson.  Guidelines to End Weaponization of “Antisemitism.”
Eric Alterman.  Distinguish Between Jews and Israelis.
Johnstone.  The alleged Epidemic of Antisemitism is False.
GLOBAL HISTORY
Alex Ryvchin. (book) The 7 Deadly Myths of Antisemism.
Magda Teter.  (Book) Blood Libel Antis. Myth.
Robert Inlakeshv. ADL Definition of Antis.
Johnstone.  Questions the Alleged Antis. Crisis on the Left.
Henry Reynolds.  “West Believes Antisemitism Is a More Egregious Problem Than Genocide.”
CCR Defends Free Speech of American Studies Association.
Rabbi Waskow Supports College Protests v. War on Gaza in “Trumpocene” era.
Faisal Kutty.  “When Condemning Antisemitism Becomes a Pretext to Criminalize Palestinian Speech.”
Jonathan Cook.  “The Antisemitic Industry Speaks for Western Elites.”
Jonathan Cook.  “How the Fight against Antisemitism Became a Shield for Israeli Genocide.”
INFORMATION CONTROL
Alan MacLeod.  V. Allegations that Middle Eastern funding of US Universities fuels Antisemitism.
Cockburn and St. Clair, eds.   (Book) The Politics of Anti-Semitism.   How a Term for a Virulent Evil Was Transformed to Bludgeon the Victims.
Arun Kundnani.  (Book) What Is Racism?
Asa Winstanley. (Book) Weaponizing Anti-Semitism.  (About UK).
Wieland Hoban.  (Book).  German’s Jewish Problem.
Jan Gross.  (Book) Fear. 
(About Poland).

 CHIEF THEMES:  1) OPPOSITION TO ISRAEL MUST BE DISTINGUISHED FROM ANTISEMISM, 2) HOW CHARGES OF ANTISEMITISM HAVE BEEN USED TO SUPPRESS DISSENT V. ISRAEL AND ITS ALLIES AROUND THE WORLD.

TEXTS

“Dissecting An ‘Antisemitism’ Psyop” by Caitlin Johnstone (May 03, 2026).

Reading by Tim Foley:
I recently watched a Sky News segment on the need to ban pro-Palestine marches which nicely illustrates the way the mass media have been working to manipulate the public into believing these demonstrations are causing antisemitic attacks.

Reporting on British prime minister Keir Starmer’s recent assertion that the “repeat nature” and “cumulative effect” of pro-Palestine marches may necessitate a ban on some protests following the Golders Green stabbing, reporter Mollie Malone repeatedly told the audience of Sky News that the marches are happening in the “context” of antisemitic incidents and “against the backdrop” of attacks on Jewish people.

There is no evidence whatsoever for the claim that pro-Palestine marches have anything at all to do with antisemitic attacks. But watch how this Sky News propagandist marries the two in the minds of her viewers by repeatedly mentioning them in the same breath and connecting them with words like “context” and “backdrop”.

“The prime minister has gone somewhat further than he has previously in discussing and commenting on how to approach and manage these protests which we’ve seen for a long time now, but clearly they now come against the backdrop of increased attacks on our Jewish communities, most recently of course on Wednesday where two Jewish men were stabbed in Golders Green,” Malone said.

Sky News@SkyNews

Sir Keir Starmer has suggested some pro-Palestine marches could be stopped because of their impact on the UK's Jewish community. Sky's @Mollie_Malone1 reports from north London ⬇️ Read more 🔗 trib.al/XTmefWl 📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602, Freeview 233 and YouTube

1:25 PM · May 2, 2026 · 108K Views


173 Replies · 25 Reposts · 73 Likes

Malone made the obligatory appeal to emotion by talking about the feelings of British Jews by saying that antisemitic attacks are “adding to fears among Jewish people,” and then said “it’s in that context that these pro-Palestine marches are being discussed.”

I could make the exact same type of argument to suggest that the faint humming sound from my refrigerator is causing the pain in my ankle. I could say I’m experiencing ankle soreness and the soreness is making my feelings feel very upset, and it is in this context and against this backdrop that the buzzing from the refrigerator is happening. At no point am I actually presenting evidence that the soreness in my ankle has anything to do with the faint buzzing sound; I’m just using fallacious associations and appeals to emotion to get you to think of them as having a causal relationship.

Malone uncritically quoted the UK’s Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation Jonathan Hall asserting on no basis whatsoever that pro-Palestine marches “incubate antisemitism,” then repeated the bogus hasbara talking point that the phrase “globalise the intifada” is “seen to incite violence towards Jewish people.”

“The context here is everything,” Malone concluded after a few moments of pro-Palestine activist rebuttals to provide the illusion of impartiality.

As the British political/media class have been doing for days when discussing the Golders Green stabbings, Malone neglects to mention that a third man who was not Jewish was also attacked in the same incident, and that the assailant had recently emerged from the care of a psychiatric hospital. You might think the perpetrator’s extensive history of mental health struggles combined with the fact that he did not solely target Jewish people would dissuade serious news reporters from framing this as an act motivated by hateful ideology, but British news media employees are not serious news reporters. They are propagandists.

This frenzied propaganda push to stomp out pro-Palestine protests across the western world has nothing to do with protecting Jewish people from antisemitic attacks. It’s about protecting the interests of Israel and the murderous western governments with whom it is aligned, and nothing else.
Caitlin’s Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
The best way to make sure you see everything I write is to get on my free mailing list. My work is entirely reader-supported, so if you enjoyed this piece here are some options where you can toss some money into my tip jar if you want to. Click here for links for my social media, books, merch, and audio/video versions of each article. All my work is free to bootleg and use in any way, shape or form; republish it, translate it, use it on merchandise; whatever you want. All works co-authored with my husband Tim Foley.


David Spero.   Contrived charges of antisemitism are the new ‘Red Scare’.”   Editor.  mronline.org (9-8-24).  

How an evidence-free smear is being used to suppress those fighting for justice in Palestine.

Originally published: Mondoweiss  on September 5, 2024 by David Spero (more by Mondoweiss).(Posted Sep 07, 2024).

Inequality, Movements, State Repression, StrategyAmericas, Israel, Middle East, Palestine, United StatesNewswire1946-57), Antisemitism, Red Scare, U.S. Senator Joe McCarthy (R – WI

U.S. Senator Joe McCarthy (R—WI, 1946-57) would have been proud. In the 1950s, McCarthy led a series of hearings and shadowy ‘investigations, attacking supporters of labor and progressive causes as ‘Communists.’ Evidence of wrongdoing was not provided and not needed, only allegations. People lost their jobs and their careers, faced hostile grilling by Congressional committees, and were sent to prison after being accused of Communism by McCarthy and his allies.

The “Red Scare,” as it was called, came to resemble the witch hunts in 17th-century New England. Now, supporters of Israel have resurrected McCarthy’s tactics, condemning all who call for peace in Palestine or an end to U.S. military aid to Israel as ‘antisemites.’

The new McCarthyites smear as Jew-haters anyone who calls for a ceasefire in Gaza or says “Free Palestine.” They have attacked universities, labor unions, and school districts around the country. Current targets include professors, doctors, students, and staff at my former employer, the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) Medical Center. . . .  MORE

 

 

Lifting the Curtain on Antisemitism.  PRA (8-24-25).

Lifting the Curtain on Antisemitism is a six-part miniseries brought to you by Political Research Associates and Diaspora Alliance. We explore how to understand antisemitism and its weaponization and to fight for collective liberation. Amidst rising authoritarianism and Israel’s genocide in Gaza, the stakes are higher than ever.

 

Alleging “Antisemitism” is a feature of authoritarianism and White Christian nationalism. And as Israel’s destruction of Gaza continues to unfold, its defenders use cynical charges of antisemitism to repress grassroots movements demanding an end to the devastation. This not only distracts from the urgent work of winning justice for Palestinians, but it also makes understanding and fighting antisemitism significantly harder. We need a rigorous analysis of how authoritarians use antisemitism and its weaponization as tools to repress progressive movements and to dismantle democracy itself.

 

Featuring wide-ranging, thought-provoking, and incisive conversations with leading experts —from journalists and scholars to organizers and policy analysts—co-hosts Shoshana Brown and Ben Lorber explore what antisemitism is, how it’s weaponized, and ultimately how we can fight it, in the service of liberation for all.

 

Listen to the trailer now!

Jonathan Kuttab.  “Antisemitism Is Sin. Period.”   FOSNA: Friends of Sabeel North America friends@fosna.org  (1-20-22).The attack this past week on the synagogue in Texas, following other recent attacks on synagogues and Jewish establishments, is an important reminder that the scourge of antisemitism is alive and well in the United States.

We at FOSNA, as adherents to Sabeel Liberation Theology, have always been clear that such antisemitism, alongside all forms of racism and discrimination, are not only condemnable but are a grave sin and an affront to the concept of a universal God who created and loves all people. Given the history of antisemitism in the West and the despicable practice of churches and theologies to justify and in some cases mandate such cruelty, it is important that our critique be theologically grounded and expressed both in teachings and practices that confront and unequivocally reject antisemitism. The dehumanization inherent to such bigotry appeals to the basest elements in human nature, collectively scapegoats vulnerable groups for the ills of society, and masks the political-economic interests of those in power. While true that it might be no longer acceptable to openly espouse antisemitic views and hatred for Jews, the sentiment still exists under the surface, often appearing in the form of “Christian Nationalism” and manifesting itself in open discrimination and hatred against other groups as well.

Those involved in the fight for justice for Palestinians must resist any possible temptation to blame all Jews for the sins of Zionism and the state of Israel and must distance themselves from those, particularly on the right, who would pretend to champion the Palestinian cause merely to hide their own racism and antisemitism—which can just as easily turn against Arabs, Muslims, immigrants, and people of color. Such antisemites are no allies or partners in the struggle for justice and equality.

It is also disturbing to find those supporters of Israel and Zionism who are willing to “give a pass” to known antisemites, so long as they profess support for Israel and its policies.

At the same time, we must be conscious and critical of those who are quick to label any criticism of Israel and any support for Palestinians as antisemitism. This was recently illustrated by the former Israeli ambassador’s attack on actress Emma Watson (of Harry Potter fame). He accused her of antisemitism for no reason other than that she shared a pro-Palestinian tweet, simply stating: “solidarity is verb.” This is just one high-profile example of the long-standing policy to use the charge of antisemitism to silence and intimidate any and all calls for justice and equality in Palestine.

The only way to combat this phenomenon is to be clear on the theological and moral grounds for our rejection of antisemitism and bigotry. . . .

 

We need to decolonize our understanding of antisemitism.”  Mronline.org (3-13-21)

https://ci5.googleusercontent.com/proxy/rUKywvP0DpoCm1P2jzJOfi7s9NyXT_y5TcKzOcGFvGky4BBzAdXvR1OoKW91ESfIveEMii3vdBRlX15TD33YIabxkz23XHAbQuq31tKKnIw99oM=s0-d-e1-ft#https://mronline.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/ihra_no_pppa.jpg

MR Online MR Online

We need to decolonize our understanding of antisemitism as a matter of urgency. And that means ditching the IHRA definition of antisemitism.  We need to decolonize our understanding of antisemitism first appeared on MR Online.    | more…

Originally published: Patheos  on March 6, 2021 by Robert A. H. Cohen (more by Patheos)(Posted Mar 12, 2021).   Culture, Ideology, Inequality, RaceGlobalNewswireAntisemitism, Campus, IHRA, Israel, Jews, Palestine, racism, Union of Jewish Students of Britain and Ireland (UJS), Zionism

I don’t want antisemitism to be misunderstood. I don’t want Jews, Zionism and Israel to be conflated. I don’t want to be perceived as supporting an oppressive and undemocratic State, just because I’m Jewish. I don’t want to be associated with a one-dimensional interpretation of Zionism which denies another people their history and identity. I don’t want the definition of racism against me to mean another people cannot protest the racism against them.

But if I support the IHRA definition of antisemitism, all of this is exactly what I’m signing up to. That’s why we need to decolonize our understanding of antisemitism as a matter of urgency. And that means ditching the IHRA. . . .

 

“Call to Refuse the IHRA Definition of Antisemitism.”   Forwarded by Joanie Connors May 26, 2025  .

Those who are academics may wish to consider signing this Call to Senior University Administrators to Refuse the IHRA (International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance) Definition of Antisemitism:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScZxGhOjFVyTvTKgTnByNGDwszDcRSAj1-uFyphwqMtNCTPFA/viewform

“Call to Senior University Administrators to Refuse the IHRA Definition of Antisemitism”

We, the Genocide and Holocaust Studies Crisis Network and allies, are a group of scholars with expertise in histories of antisemitism, genocide, the Holocaust, the history and sociology of fascism, and hate speech. We come from diverse backgrounds and carry diverse religious, social, and political identities. Based on our extensive research, we urge all universities to refuse to adopt the problematic and confusing International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance [IHRA] Working Definition of Antisemitism. We urge university administrators across a broad spectrum to join in asserting that protest and criticism of state violence constitute protected speech on campuses.

Conceived as a legally non-binding definition of antisemitism in 2016, the IHRA definition is now in the process of being adopted into law by our states, the federal government, and our universities. By accepting the IHRA’s conflation of criticism of Zionism, Israeli state policies, and violence against Palestinians with antisemitism (i.e. anti-Jewish prejudice), university administrations have harmed students, faculty, and community members -- many of them Jews -- who rightfully protest Israel’s destructive assault on Gaza. Citing its chilling effect, even its co-author, Kenneth Stern, has repudiated the IHRA definition’s current uses.

The IHRA definition constitutes an attack on constitutional rights to free expression and has functioned to discipline, detain, expel, and deport students and scholars. University administrators have the power to come together and assert that the actions of Mahmoud Khalil, Badar Khan Suri, Rümeysa Öztürk, and others wrongfully arrested simply for expressing their political views, are not antisemitic. 

We request that you use your authority as university administrators to reject the misperceptions that impede free inquiry into the complexities of Jewish and Palestinian histories. Labeling anti-Zionist Jews as antisemitic, for example, encourages the erasure of a long history of Jewish anti-Zionist organizations and political parties. By generating a false understanding of antisemitism, universities allow attacks on anti-Zionist Jews for the way they identify as Jews. This very real antisemitism puts Jews in danger. The IHRA definition of antisemitism also sanctions Palestinians for merely describing the reality of systemic Israeli racism that they face, and it thus silences, excludes, erases, defames and/or dehumanizes Palestinians and their narratives. Finally, the adoption of the IHRA definition risks curtailing faculty members’ freedom to teach these histories that have been studied and documented extensively, including by Jewish and Israeli scholars. 

Universities should be safe and welcoming environments for all students. We believe that it is the university’s responsibility both to prevent and respond appropriately to discrimination and racism of all kinds, to protect Native people, Muslims, Jews, Arabs, Black people, Asians, Latinos, people with disabilities, and LGBTQI+ people. That responsibility also includes recognizing the right of students to take part in peaceful protest. 

We hope that you share our vision for a university where academic freedom, political expression, and the protection of marginalized students and faculty are paramount. It is time to work towards restoring universities as spaces where complex histories can be studied freely and all legitimate scholarly and political opinions can be heard. We request that you work together across universities to realize this vision, which institutions articulate but have not done enough to protect. Rejecting the IHRA definition is one concrete and powerful step towards making this goal a reality.

 

How NOT To Run an Antisemitism Commission” by Michael Felsen (May 19, 2025).  Portside Snapshot (May 21-25).Hatred of Jews because they are Jews is anathema wherever it rears its ugly head, it should be called out. But anti-Israel statements should not presumptively be equated with antisemitism, nor pro- Israeli statements imply an absence of antisemitism.  Felsen provides five principles for moving forward.

Eric Alterman.  “Shut Up About the Jews Already….”   The Nation (Oct. 22, 2012).   This past reflection on the deliberate confusion of the phrase “anti-Semitism” applies to the ferocious conflict between Israel and Gaza in 2023.   If thinking is to be clear and not only a weapon for domination, we must distinguish between Jews and Israelis .  Criticism of Israel or Israeli leaders or policy is not a criticism of Jews; that would be anti-Semitism.   Today critics of Israel’s assault on Gaza are accused of being anti-Semites, a ploy to divert the world from the horrendous crimes by Netanyahu’s government.  Alterman calls such misdirection a familiar type of McCarthyism that turns victims into perpetrators.

 

As Israel gets more murderous, we’ll be hearing even more about ‘Antisemitism’” by  Caitlin A. Johnstone.  Mronline.org (9-28-24). 

The very first time you get accused of hating Jews for voicing legitimate criticisms of Israel’s actions, you immediately understand that the whole narrative about an epidemic of “antisemitism” in our society is a complete lie.

GLOBAL HISTORY OF ANTISEMITISM

The 7 Deadly Myths: Antisemitism from the Time of Christ to Kanye West by Alex Ryvchin.  Cherry Orchard Books, 2023,  114 pp.    Review by  Thomas Klikauer To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/10848770.2023.2265716 Published online: 05 Oct 2023.

Alex Ryvchin’s The 7 Deadly Myths: Antisemitism from the Time of Christ to Kanye West starts by asking: “Why have the Jews been so despised and so brutalised throughout history?” One possible answer to that might be found in Götz Aly’s masterfully written, Why the Germans? Why the Jews? (2015). Another answer, as Ryvchin suggests, might be the fact that, throughout history “the Jew is a convenient scapegoat.” Perhaps it is also because “the most common explanation [is] that antisemitism comes from jealousy for Jewish success” (8). Beyond that, “the Jew is hated because of how he or she is perceived to think” (10) and what he or she represents. Apart from these possible explanations of why Jews are discriminated against, Ryvchin correctly insists on spelling antisemitism as one word without capital letters and not as antiSemitism. (Indeed, as Deborah E. Lipstadt pointed out in Denying the Holocaust (1993), spelling it with a capital ‘A’ would elevate anti-Semitic ideology which is what Holocaust deniers want.) He notes that the original source of the word “antisemitism” dates back to the German (no surprise here) agitator Wilhelm Marr in the year 1879. In the 1930s, German Nazism added race to antisemitism. The Jew is hated for being a Jew and being part of something that does not exist: the Jewish race. One is inclined to think of the countless victims and what they might have thought: I have done nothing wrong. Under Nazi ideology, Jewish people did not need to do anything wrong, being Jewish was enough. In its institutional form, Nazism might be gone, but antisemitism is not. As Madeleine Albright once wrote, “it is easier to remove tyrants and destroy concentration camps than to kill the ideas that gave them birth.” Antisemitism lives on. It is not at all surprising that Ryvchin found that “a poll conducted in the United States in 2020 found that a majority of Americans thought the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust was a third of the actual number. Nearly half were unable to name a single concentration or death camp. One in ten believed the Jews had caused the Holocaust” (10). Perhaps even worse than what Americans believe are the 14,000 antisemitic messages sent to Jewish institutions in Germany in the recent past. Much of antisemitism dates back to medieval Europe where “laws were enacted to isolate the Jews” (176). For example, in Basel in 1434, Jews were forbidden from getting academic degrees. Jewish people could not enter a medieval guild (Zunft). Ryvchin argues that with “the rise of national movements and nation states . . . the Jews became a problem to be solved” (17). Actually, Jewish people did not simply become a problem to be solved, they were made into a problem. And what eventually followed was “the Holocaust [as the] final fulfilment of every antisemitic fantasy.” Yet one is tempted to argue against the premise that “the question of Why the Jews? remains ultimately unresolved” (18). Books like Alex Ryvchin’s make a valuable contribution to solving this question. Then of course there is Götz Aly’s other book Europa gegen die Juden which is not off the mark either. Eventually, Ryvchin closes his introduction with “each antisemitic attack, each synagogue shooting can be attributed to one of the seven myths” (19) of antisemitism. With that he begins his, much too short, book of seven chapters: “The Blood Libel”; “Christ-killers”; “Global Domination”; “Chosen”; “Money”; “Dual Loyalties”; and “Oppressed to Oppressors. . . .”    

 

Magda Teter.  Blood Libel: On the Trail of an Antiisemitic Myth.  Harvard UP, 2020.   560pp.  Rev.  David Nirenberg.  “The Impresarios of Trent: the long and frightening history of the blood libel.”  The Nation (11-30/12-7, 2020).  And other libels v. marginalized groups.

 

“Wikipedia Calls Key Zionist Lobby ‘Unreliable’.”  Consortium News (6-16-24).

Robert Inlakesh says the pushback against the ADL is a rebuke to the definition of anti-Semitism adopted by U.S. universities, companies, governments, political parties and lawmakers. Read here...


“We’ve seen this “antisemitism crisis on the Left” script before
” BY
Caitlin A. Johnstone.  Mronline.org (6-19-24).

 

It sure is a crazy coincidence how western politicians and media always start urgently telling us about an invisible epidemic of left wing antisemitism every time western military ties to Israel are subjected to widespread public scrutiny.

 

The West believes antisemitism is a more egregious problem than genocide.”   Editor.  mronline.org (5-13-24).

Originally published: Pearls and Irritations  on May 10, 2024 by Henry Reynolds (more by Pearls and Irritations) (Posted May 12, 2024)

Human Rights, Ideology, Inequality, WarAmericas, Gaza, Israel, Middle East, Palestine, United StatesNewswireAntisemitism

The loss of Western authority as a result of Israel’s genocidal attack on Gaza has merely sped up changes already underway for a generation.

 

LAW: US, ISRAEL, GENOCIDE, FREE SPEECH, ACADEMIC FREEDOM

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Freedom of expression at stake as D.C. appeals court hears case targeting academics advocating for Palestinian rights 

 Last week, the D.C. Court of Appeals heard oral arguments in a lawsuit against the American Studies Association and some of its former leaders for a 2013 resolution endorsing the academic boycott of Israel. The D.C. Superior Court dismissed all claims last year, most of them under a D.C. law designed to deter lawsuits that target people who speak out on matters of public concern. The defendants include Dr. Steven Salaita, an advocate for Palestinian liberation who joined the ASA board two years after the resolution and who we represent in this case. 

“As this seemingly interminable litigation continues, I watch in awe as thousands of students, faculty, and community members face down extraordinary repression in their devotion to Palestine's liberation. I am honored to join them in refusing to back down.”  – Dr. Steven Salaita   

Last week’s hearing took place amid a nationwide crackdown on student protests calling on universities to divest from Israel as it wages a genocidal campaign in Gaza. The case emerges from a longstanding pattern of assaults on the free speech rights of Palestinian solidarity activists. 
Read the 
full press release on our website.  

 

“The New Anti-Antisemitism: Colleges Invite Police to Pro-Palestinian Camps” by Rabbi Arthur Waskow via uark.onmicrosoft.com the Shalom Center

 

The response to college protests against the war on Gaza exemplifies the darkness of the Trumpocene. 

Rick Perlstein. . . .We are reprinting excerpts from his article called “The New Anti-antisemitism” on the pro-Palestinian campus encampments supporting a ceasefire and peace in the war between Israeli and Palestinian regimes. For the whole article see https://prospect.org/politics/2024-05-08-new-anti-antisemitism-college-protests-gaza/.   — AW, ed.

 

“The New Anti-Antisemitism [Colleges Invite Police to Pro-Palestinian Camps]” By Rick Perlstein
You might have already stomached some of the videos of last week’s most harrowing abuses. At the University of Wisconsin, a balding, bespectacled professor face down, two cops pinning his left arm sharply behind his back, and a disabled professor getting her dress torn and suffering internal damage from police strangulation. The 65-year-old former head of Dartmouth’s Jewish studies program who dared scream “What are you doing?” at cops being taken down with a wrestling move that also left her with an arm wrenched behind her back. Then a second cop arriving to keep her pinned as a third looks on blithely, rifle at the ready. (She was suspended by her university for her trouble.) At Washington University in St. Louis, a 65-year-old professor, a Quaker, was told by his doctor he was “lucky to be alive” after absorbing a flying tackle from a very large officer for the sin of filming cops with his cellphone, then being dragged to a nearby patch of grass, writhing, then to a police van, where he fell limp. . . .
Not to slight, amid this Orwellian catalog, those who are just plain lying. As 
press critic and higher-education historian Will Bunch points out, on the campus of Ohio State in Columbus, one of several schools that let snipers aim rifles at students, the administration first said there weren’t any snipers. “When presented with evidence, they admitted the truth.”
Any historical account of how this madness presently comes to pass might start, not in the 1960s, but with a pattern so ancient it’s practically more archaeological than historical: the claim of outside agitators.
The actual examples of alleged Jew-hatred that have been adduced are so threadbare. 
A protest leader arrays the bodies of protesters as a human shield against those who’ve shown up to oppose their protest. One cries—at a protest leader who, for all we know, just as well might be Jewish—“We didn’t say a word! My friend had a Jewish star necklace! All the sudden we’re surrounded, they’ve been circling us, they’re threatening us.”
I mean, think about it: Do we complain when strikers who put up a picket don’t let anti-union activists join the line of march?
[After quoting pages of Perlstein’s excellent, circumstantial expose of the repression of dissenters, Waskow concluded]:

Though these views are not necessarily those of The Shalom Center, it is The Shalom Center that brings them to you for your thought. So — If you are joyful to see The Shalom Center’s providing ideas and resources to create a more just and loving Earth and Humanity, or saddened but had your determination to act for change strengthened by a Shalom Center report of danger, please help us keep doing this work by contributing. We are 40 years old and we are working to transform ourselves for the next 40; if you can quadruple your last gift, please do! Click here: theshalomcenter.org/donate

 

 

“When Condemning Anti-Semitism Becomes a Pretext to Criminalize Palestinian Speech” by Faisal Kutty.   Posted On January 13, 2026.  Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, March/April 2026, pp. 70-71.

IN THE WEEKS following the anti-Semitic mass shooting at Bondi Beach in Australia, political leaders, media commentators and pro-Israel advocacy groups have converged on a troubling response: calls to restrict or ban the phrase “Globalize the Intifada,” discipline student protesters and treat Palestinian political expression as inherently dangerous. What is unfolding in Australia is not an isolated reaction to a horrific crime, but part of a broader pattern visible across Western democracies—including the United States and Canada—where legitimate concern about anti-Semitism is being transformed into a vehicle for suppressing Palestinian speech.

The premise underlying these efforts is simple and deeply flawed: that slogans, protests or expressions associated with Palestinian resistance are causally linked to anti-Semitic violence. This premise is not only unsupported by evidence; it is dangerous. . . .

 

 

 

 

 

Jonathan Cook.  The Antisemitism Industry doesn’t speak for Jews. It speaks for western elites   Mronline.org (3-16-24).

Film-maker Jonathan Glazer’s crime at the Oscars was to threaten the establishment’s stranglehold on the West’s narrative about Israel–and itself

 

Jonathan Cook.   How the ‘fight against antisemitism’ became a shield for Israel’s genocide.”

Western capitals no longer treat Israel like a state, a political actor capable of slaughtering children, but rather as a sacred cause. So any opposition has to be a blasphemy.

 

ISRAELI INFORMATION CONTROL

 

Israel Lobby-Linked Group Tied To Illegal Settlements And Campus CensorshipBy Alan MacLeod, MintPress News.   PopularResistance.org (2-21-24).  Even as Israel pounds Gaza into rubble, carrying out what has been described as a genocide in the process, many of its supporters are attempting to change the subject, instead decrying a supposedly new wave of dangerous antisemitism across American universities. Their evidence for this is a new report from the Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI). Entitled “The Corruption of the American Mind,” the study alleges that Middle Eastern funding of U.S. universities has helped unleash a torrent of anti-Jewish hatred. Yet, as we shall see, not only does the report contain... -more-
 

 

CounterPunch counterpunch@counterpunch.org via counterpunch.ccsend.com 

 

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How did a term, once used accurately to describe the most virulent evil, become a charge flung at the mildest critic of Israel, particularly concerning its atrocious treatment of Palestinians?

Edited by Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair, the print and online journal CounterPunch has become a must read for hundreds of thousands a month who no longer believe anything they read in the mainstream press beyond the sports scores. On the subject of Israel and Palestine, the Israeli lobby in the U.S., the current Middle East crisis, and its ramifications at home and abroad, CounterPunch has been unrivaled.

Herein, you’ll find CounterPunch’s most compelling reporting and commentary on this topic.

Contributors include: former U.S. Representative -Cynthia McKinney, famed British foreign correspon-dent Robert Fisk, former seniorCIA analysts Bill and Kathy Christison, the trenchant and witty philosopher Michael Neumann, seasoned Capitol Hill staffer "George Sutherland," Norman Finkelstein, the leading Israeli dissident Yuri Avneri, Shaheed Alam (who became a target of the fanatical Daniel Pipes), and Israeli journalists Neve Gordon and Yigal Bronner.

In addition are: Will Yeoman's path-breaking essay on Israel and divestment, >Kurt Nimmo on the hysterical attacks on AmiriBaraka for his poem on 9-11, Anne Pettifer’s Zionism UnboundJeffrey St. Clair on the (Israeli) attack on the USS Liberty and the suppression of the investigation, and >Alexander Cockburn’s caustic and lightheartedmemoir of his own experiences of being attacked as an anti-Semite, consequent upon his criticisms of Israel.

This first book in the new CounterPunch series, is a timely anthology on the compulsion of silence and complicity in crimes against a betrayed people.

Nationally syndicated journalists Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair have co-authored numerous bestsellers, including Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs And The PressWashington Babylon and Al Gore: A User’s Manual.


Ann Garrison, review of  “What Is Anti-Racism? And Why It Means Anti-Capitalism” A book review.

Arun Kundnani details the histories of liberal and radical anti-racism and argues that anti-racism ultimately means anti-capitalism.

Arun Kundnani details the histories of liberal and radical anti-racism and argues that anti-racism ultimately means anti-capitalism.

 

 

 

 

HISTORY OF ANTISEMITISM

 

HOW THE ISRAEL LOBBY WEAPONIZES ANTI-SEMITISM  

AROUND THE WORLD April24, 2026.

 

 

 

 

 


WEAPONISING ANTI-SEMITISM: How The Israel Lobby Brought Down Jeremy Corbyn by ASA WINSTANLEY. 

Essential reading . . . a comprehensive answer to right wing propagandists who endorse this manufactured campaign . . .”—Ken Loach.    “For five years Jeremy Corbyn was portrayed as a bigot leading an anti-Semitic Labour Party. This important book makes the case for the defence.”  —Peter Oborne.   “Winstanley tells this explosive story without fear, favour, or frills.”—Roger Waters.   

OR Books www.orbooks.com  OR Books | 40 Avenue C | New York, NY 10009.

 

 

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GERMANYS JEWISH PROBLEM: Genocides Past and Present by
WIELAND HOBAN.   April24, 2026   Foreword Iris Hefets.  Afterword Mitchell Plitnick. 
A leading German-Jewish peace activist dissects Germany’s authoritarian crackdown after Gaza.  
 From German gentiles confidently charging Israeli Jewish expats with antisemitism, to the German state’s decades-long project to stifle free speech under the guise of combating “antisemitism,” to German officials mobilizing their historical responsibility for one genocide to justify participating in another—Wieland Hoban guides us through the grotesqueries of German “memory culture” and shows their lethal consequences.

 

“Wieland Hoban is a candle in the darkness of German discourse on Israel/Palestine.” —Nathan Thrall, winner of the Pulitzer Prize.   “Trenchant, perceptive, and timely.”—Dirk Moses  
“Arrives like a meteor, signaling hope and the power of thought.”—Majed Abusalama  
“Desperately needed in a country where dissident opinions are not only censored but criminalized.”
—Hebh Jamal 

 

BUY NOW

POLISH ANTISEMITISM

Jan Gross.  Fear. FINALIST FOR THE NATIONAL JEWISH BOOK AWARD, NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK WORLD.
Publisher’s description: Poland suffered an exceedingly brutal Nazi occupation during the Second World War. Close to five million Polish citizens lost their lives as a result. More than half the casualties were Polish Jews. Thus, the second largest Jewish community in the world-- only American Jewry numbered more than the three and a half million Polish Jews at the time--was wiped out. Over 90 percent of its members were killed in the Holocaust. And yet, despite this unprecedented calamity that affected both Jews and non-Jews, Jewish Holocaust survivors returning to their hometowns in Poland after the war experienced widespread hostility, including murder, at the hands of their neighbors. The bloodiest peacetime pogrom in twentieth-century Europe took place in the Polish town of Kielce one year after the war ended, on July 4, 1946. Jan Gross's Fear attempts to answer a perplexing question: How was anti-Semitism possible in Poland after the war? At the center of his investigation is a detailed reconstruction of the Kielce pogrom and the reactions it evoked in various milieus of Polish society. How did the Polish Catholic Church, Communist party workers, and intellectuals respond to the spectacle of Jews being murdered by their fellow citizens in a country that had just been liberated from a five-year Nazi occupation? Gross argues that the anti-Semitism displayed in Poland in the war's aftermath cannot be understood simply as a continuation of prewar attitudes. Rather, it developed in the context of the Holocaust and the Communist takeover: . . . The 'fear' of Mr.Gross's title . . . is not just the fear suffered by Jews in a Poland that wished they had never come back alive. It is also the fear of the Poles themselves, who saw in those survivors a reminder of their own wartime crimes. Even beyond Mr. Gross's exemplary historical research and analysis, it is this lesson that makes "Fear "such an important book."-"The New York Sun".   "After all the millions dead, after the Nazi terror, a good many Poles still found it acceptable to hate the Jews among them. . . . The sorrows of history multiply: a necessary book." -"Kir, An astonishing and heartbreaking study of the Polish Holocaust survivors who returned home only to face continued violence and anti-Semitism at the hands of their neighbors "[ Fear ] culminates in so keen a shock that even a student of the Jewish tragedy during World War II cannot fail to feel it."--Elie Wiesel.  . . . .

 

END OMNI ANTISEMITISM ANTHOLOGY