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To describe the state of American Jewry after our warm spring of the 1950s through the early 1970s is akin to watching a shriveled brown leaf blowing aimlessly in the wind, in the midst of a cold and bitter winter.

At mid-century, the images of the Holocaust were still seared into the consciousness of the American public. Today, young students and even congressional staffers I meet on Capitol Hill dismiss it as “ancient history.” The moral memory that once anchored American society has been steadily eroding.

A major turning point came in 1979, when Edward Said revolutionized the study of the Middle East with Orientalism, a book that insisted that racism, sexism, and Western views of the region all stem from a singular, malign “occidental narrative.” According to this doctrine, only a “native” of the region may legitimately speak—conveniently excluding the Jewish people who returned to their ancestral homeland after 2,000 years of dispersion, itself one of the great strategic and moral triumphs of the Zionist project.

We all remember the sheer barbarity of October 7, 2023: babies burned alive in ovens before their parents’ eyes; parents murdered or kidnapped in front of their children; children and infants slaughtered or dragged into Gaza; young women at the Nova Festival raped en masse by jihadists before being murdered or taken hostage. At least 1,200 human beings were butchered and 253 dragged into Hamas’ terror tunnels.

Yet on that very day, Columbia University Professor Joseph Massad took to The Electronic Intifada to express his “jubilation and awe.” He praised “the Palestinian resistance fighters” who stormed checkpoints and “broke through Israel’s prison fence,” celebrating the “millions of jubilant Arabs” watching the atrocities unfold. On October 15, Cornell Professor Russell Rickford publicly declared that Hamas had “challenged the monopoly of violence,” calling the massacre “exhilarating” and “energizing.”

This rhetoric is endemic to the more than 250 chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) across the United States. By October 12—mere days after the slaughter—National SJP held a nationwide “day of resistance,” distributing celebratory imagery of the very paragliders used to attack the Nova Festival. SJP itself was founded by Berkeley’s Hatem Bazian, now chair of Berkeley’s Department of “Islamophobic Studies.”

What began in Middle Eastern Studies departments has metastasized across the humanities and social sciences and is now filtering into elementary, middle, and high schools, where antisemitism and anti-Israel indoctrination are becoming firmly entrenched.

A September 2025 report by Paul Zimmerman of the Defense of Freedom Institute documents how radical Left ideologies—fixated on dismantling supposedly racist Western institutions and combating “settler colonialism”—have transformed America’s teacher unions. Once proud supporters of Israel, these unions now demand boycotts, divestment, and sanctions against the world’s only Jewish state, even in the wake of the deadliest attack on Jews since the Holocaust. Union activists use their influence to saturate teacher trainings and curricular materials, beginning in preschool, with propaganda targeting Israel and “the Zionists.”

At September 10, 2025,  at an Education and Workforce Committee hearing, Representative Kevin Kiley (R-CA) warned that this crisis extends well beyond universities. “Antisemitism is also a growing problem in our K-12 education system,” he noted. “At some schools in my home state, the environment is so hostile that Jewish children are withdrawing and transferring elsewhere. Even California’s own Department of Education has found ethnic studies curricula to be antisemitic across multiple districts.’

Many students emerging from these environments lack critical thinking skills and simply repeat—parrot-like—the rhetoric of their teachers and professors. Meanwhile, the Qatar Foundation offers millions of dollars to K–12 teachers, complete with “supplemental guides” on Arabic culture and language, and funnels billions into American universities. Qatar’s “Education City” in Doha hosts satellite campuses of Arkansas State University, Carnegie Mellon, Georgetown’s School of Foreign Service, Northwestern, Texas A&M, Virginia Commonwealth, and Cornell’s Weill Medical College.

This is in addition to the billions directed to American think tanks and funneled through the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) to influence U.S. policymakers.

Yet it would be dangerously incomplete to focus solely on the antisemitism emanating from the radical Left. In recent years, an unmistakable and deeply troubling current of antisemitism has also emerged on the Right—sometimes overt, sometimes cloaked in coded language, and sometimes masquerading as mere “anti-elitism” or “anti-globalism.”

Figures such as Tucker Carlson, once one of the most influential conservative media personalities in America, have dabbled in rhetoric that echoes classic antisemitic conspiracies. His repeated invocations of “replacement theory”—the idea that elites are deliberately replacing Americans with foreign populations—draw from the same ideological well that has historically targeted Jews as the imagined architects of demographic or cultural change. Though he does not always name Jews directly, the dog whistle is unmistakable to those who listen for it, including extremist groups who have publicly praised his commentary.

Even more explicit is Nicholas Feuntes, a self-declared white supremacist and Holocaust denier whose movement—thinly disguised under the banner of “Christian nationalism”—has gained traction among disaffected young men. Fuentes openly glorifies Hitler, denies the historical reality of the Holocaust, and insists that America must be remade into a theocratic state that excludes Jews. It is a testament to the erosion of civic norms that such an openly bigoted figure has not been relegated to total political obscurity, but instead has cultivated a following and even met with political figures who should have known better.

Then there is Candace Owens, whose influential media presence brings a different but equally corrosive form of rhetoric into mainstream conservative spaces. While not a white supremacist herself, she has repeatedly adopted narratives that minimize antisemitism, trivialize the suffering of the Jewish people, or recast Jews as powerful “elites” oppressing others. Her recent statements—which excused or relativized antisemitic attacks, promoted conspiratorial thinking about Jewish influence, and portrayed Jewish communal institutions as hostile forces—have energized an online ecosystem that blends anti-Jewish and anti-Israel sentiment into a broader narrative of cultural grievance.

Finally, the rhetoric emanating from institutional leaders on the Right cannot be ignored. Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation—one of the most powerful conservative think tanks in America—has increasingly trafficked in the language of “civilizational conflict” and “globalist subversion,” frameworks historically weaponized against Jews. While Roberts does not invoke Jews explicitly, these narratives provide fertile ground for extremist interpretations. When mainstream conservative institutions flirt with such abstractions, they risk laundering bigoted ideas into respectability and offering cover for those who interpret these metaphors as license to target Jews and other minorities.

What unites these figures is not a coherent ideology but a shared willingness to exploit fear, resentment, and cultural polarization—and in doing so, to normalize narratives that have historically placed Jews in the crosshairs. Antisemitism does not survive without oxygen. Today, it finds oxygen across the political spectrum. On the far Left, it is framed as anti-colonialism, anti-racism, and “deconstructing power.” On the far Right, it is wrapped in the language of nationalism, traditionalism, and cultural defense.

Both currents feed the same ancient hatred. Both put American Jewry at risk. Both must be confronted with equal moral clarity. To be an American, entails standing up for our foundational principles. For American Jews, these principles are seriously at risk from the left and the right.

Sarah Stern is Founder and President of EMET, a Middle Eastern think tank and policy institute in Washington, DC

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About the Author

Sarah Stern
Sarah Stern is founder and president of the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET).

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