The Antisemitism Iceberg:
Antisemitism doesn’t always look the same.
Overt antisemitism is the kind people tend to recognize easily: hateful slurs, physical attacks, Holocaust denial, vandalism of Jewish spaces, or openly neo-Nazi rhetoric. It’s visible, blatant, and widely condemned.
Covert antisemitism is more insidious. It hides behind “acceptable” language, claiming to be just anti-Zionist while denying Jewish people’s right to self-determination, spreading conspiracies about Jews controlling media or money, invading Jewish spaces to “talk about Palestine,” stereotyping Jewish appearance or wealth, or downplaying the very real rise in antisemitic incidents.
Today, much of antisemitism is disguised and dressed up as political critique, “just asking questions,” or claiming to know better than Jews what counts as antisemitic. But whether overt or covert, all of it fuels the same dangerous hate.
It’s time to call it what it is.
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