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How Israel is fueling antisemitism

The article below by Richard Kuper appears in the latest edition of Chartist Magazine, May-June 2026.
It is a shorter, tighter version of the argument advanced in Does Israel cause antisemitism? posted  on this site on 27th Oct 2025.
It is particularly apposite today, given the moral panic we are witnessing, now targeting the Green Party and its Jewish leader for antisemitism.
Blame anyone and everyone in order to divert attention from the real and obvious cause of the rise of antisemitism in the world today – Israel’s genocidal conduct carried out in the name of all Jews.
RK

How Israel is fueling antisemitism

Richard Kuper, Chartist Magazine, May-June 2026

Many believe it is misguided in the extreme to suggest that Israel could possibly “cause” antisemitism. That would be to blame the victim, to blame Jews for hostility against them, no different to saying Blacks are responsible for anti-Black racism.

But it’s not as simple as that.

The general term “antisemitism” flattens and distorts, conflating two very different sources of hostility towards Jews. I argue here that Israel’s actions – and those of Jewish communal bodies that give Israel their uncritical support –  facilitate and indeed encourage the slippage from legitimate criticism of what Israel does into what Jews are. Or, to put it in the words of the IHRA working definition, of antisemitism it fosters the antisemitic view that “Jews are collectively responsible for actions of the state of Israel”.

Two kinds of “antisemitism”

Traditional antisemitism is the phenomenon in which Jews are constructed as “Jews”, embodying stereotypical images of the ‘deceitful’, ‘crooked’, ‘manipulative’, ‘cliquey’, ‘rootless’, ‘wealthy’, ‘powerful’, ‘conspiratorial’ individual which are then projected onto Jews in general.  The Jerusalem Declaration on Antisemitism’s definition captures this well: “Antisemitism is discrimination, prejudice, hostility or violence against Jews as Jews (or Jewish institutions as Jewish).”

What we also have in recent decades is a galloping antipathy towards Israel because its war on the Palestinians, conducted by the Jewish state, is perceived as unjust.

This hatred had nothing to do with historical stereotypes and everything to do with realities: the cruelty of the occupation, the killing of the peace process; the violations of the 4th Geneva Convention and international law more generally; Israel’s apartheid structures and its genocidal war on Gaza; and Israel’s impunity. Israelis are increasingly resented for what Israel was doing, not because they are Jewish. And governments who should hold Israel to account are turning a blind eye, fostering that sense of impunity and therefore the resentment it induces.

It is this growing hatred that Israel, Zionism generally, and Jewish communal organisations have deemed to be the “new antisemitism”, that the IHRA Working Definition of antisemitism specifically targets.

It isn’t antisemitism as such, but there is a danger of that two very different sources of hatred can begin to overlap. Ezra Klein, in the New York Times, is clear: “Acres of evidence attest to a reality all Jews know: Anger at Israel becomes anger at Jews everywhere.”

Israel willingly and deliberately implicates all Jews worldwide in its actions. And many communal Jewish organisations go along with this in their uncritical support for Israel, asserting unambiguously that to be a Jew is to be a Zionist, to be in wholehearted support of what the state of Israel is doing, in our name and for us.

The result, in Jewish commentator MJ Rosenberg’s words: “You cannot spend decades insisting that Israel represents all Jews and then be surprised when others, including dangerous and hateful people, take that claim at face value.”

There has been some dissent among leading Jewish supporters of Israel speaking out to say that what Israel is doing is fueling antisemitism worldwide, is not good for Jews. Their dissent has been ruthlessly suppressed (for the response in Britain see here).

What Israeli forces have done in Gaza and the wider region is unconscionable. And they have done it as “Jews”. Openly, proudly affirming their right to lord it over the land which they say their god has given them. They make no distinction between Jew, Israeli and Zionist.

And they feign surprise when more and more people believe them. People become less bothered about treading on the eggshells of Jewish sensitivity when Israel’s Jewish supporters can’t be bothered to maintain even the fiction of a distinction between Jews and Zionists.

A danger to the solidarity movement

This development is dangerous for the solidarity movement. We also see it creeping into our social media. “The Zionists” are to blame for everything. As Zionists insist on affirming, they are the real Jews, so why not blame “the Jews”?. We are lucky not to see more of it. It is as though Israel’s supporters are trying to will it into being. That then justifies Israel’s existence and everything it does as the only possible way to survive the “eternal hatred” that antisemitism is.

Except it isn’t. This hatred we witness today is caused by what Israel does. It can be stopped only by Israel being forced to desist.

Were Jewish communal bodies serious about undercutting the processes that fuel the rise in anti-Jewish sentiment today, they would be tacking it at source, calling vociferously for the immediate end to the occupation and equal rights for all between the river and the sea. It wouldn’t end antisemitism as an irrational hatred of Jews as Jews, but it would drain the swamps in which anti-Jewish sentiment can fester.

As they continue to fail us, it is up to Jews in the multiplicity of organisations that make up  the Jewish Bloc, now visible on all the pro-Palestinian marches, to do so for them.

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Richard Kuper is a member of the Jewish Voice for Liberation (JVL) web editorial group. This article was completed on 9th April 2026.

  • If only the BoD and the CAA etc didn’t show their uncritical support for Israel at their rally where the Israeli flag is prominent, intertwined with the union jacks of the far right, and instead marched in the antigenocide demonstrations, that would be a positive manifestation of the differentiating of British Jews from Israeli state. And to stop calling these marches against genocide “hate marches” would also help their cause.

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  • It is obvious that British and Jewish establishment support for the genocide of the indigenous inhabitants of the original land of Palestine, as if on behalf of all Jewish people, is leading to proper questioning and ultimately to hostility.

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  • In the wake of the attacks in Golders Green, Keir Starmer referred to “a reurgence of antisemitism”. This approach reflects the position of the Israeli government, namely that attacks on Israel have nothing to do with that state’s confiscation of land, its denial of Palestinian stastehood, its apartheid policies and its support of settler pogromists; it is nothing other than an eternal, ever-present phenomenon – antisemitism.
    A final point about blame: guilt is not a finite entity. Many can contribute in different ways and to different degrees to criminal outcomes – direct perpetrators, inciters, those who look away… The guilt of one does not subtract from the guilt of others. Among the guilty today, in Britain, are, besides the direct perpetrators, the principal and widely recognised institutional leaders of the Jewish community, above all the BoD.

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  • Excellent and very succinct analysis of what is portrayed as ‘anti-semitism’ by politicians and media.
    I am disturbed that this has been made ‘normal’ since the Nakba without question.

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  • See JRachel Shabi’s lecture to the Quaker socialists last weekend on the ‘moral catastrophe’ of the Middle East : the Salter Lecture, for the question of ‘why?’ the west puts Israel’s nterests first.

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  • And the moral panic we are witnessing about antisemitism, now targeting the Green Party and its Jewish leader – for antisemitism, oh for goodness sake! – is being driven by hypocritical conservative establishment (ie Starmer clique etc) supporters of the genocide being inflicted by the truly terrorist state of Israel.

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