Causing wars, revolutions and calamities of 1919–1921 showing a Jew behind both capitalism (represented by money)
and communism (Stalin) German politician
Heinrich von Treitschke in the 19th century coined the phrase ("The Jews are our misfortune!"), which became 's motto. Israeli-British historian
Efraim Karsh noted, Both ends of the political spectrum accused
American Jews of "dragging" the country into
World War II and the Iraq War, exaggerating the influence of an alleged
Israel lobby. It was also promoted by political scientist
John Mearsheimer in a
2007 book, which was criticized for legitimizing the "Jewish domination" trope and encouraging antisemitism. The
Franklin Prophecy was unknown before its appearance in 1934 in
William Dudley Pelley's
pro-Nazi magazine
Liberation. As per the 2004 U.S. Congress report
Antisemitism in Europe: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on European Affairs of the Committee on Foreign Relations,
Turning people LGBT In 2016,
Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI) highlighted a video in which a
Kuwaiti
Salafi preacher alleged that
SpongeBob SquarePants and other youth cartoons were created by Jews in order to promote
homosexuality,
atheism,
Satanism and the "
emo movement". In 2018, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan accused Jews of "turning men into women and women into men" with a "specially concocted strain of
marijuana" invented to make Black men
gay and
effeminate. In 2020, conspiracy theorist
Rick Wiles endorsed a claim by some "Messianic Jews" that "
Zionists" seek to "make all of humanity
androgynous" as per the
Kabbalistic concept of
Adam Kadmon. They alleged that the plot involved "Zionist" support for transgender rights to "make people LGBT" by "putting specific things in food, in drink". Contrarily, some
lesbian feminists have accused Jews of being "killers of the Goddess" over their perception of the
god of Israel being male to blame Jews for women's mistreatment under the "patriarchy".
Controlling the weather and causing natural disasters On March 16, 2018,
Council of the District of Columbia member
Trayon White posted a video on his
Facebook page showing snow flurries falling, alluding to the
conspiracy theory of the
Rothschild family conspiring to manipulate the weather. In his post, he stated, "Y'all better pay attention to this climate control, man, this climate manipulation ... And that's a model based off the Rothschilds controlling the climate to create natural disasters they can pay for to own the cities, man. Be careful." The comment was widely reported in Washington and worldwide media as an endorsement of an
antisemitic conspiracy theory. The
Washington City Paper reported on March 19 that this was not the first time in which White alluded to a Jewish conspiracy to control global weather. The belief that Jews use space lasers to manipulate the weather, or the belief that Jews use space lasers to cause natural disasters, also dates back to 2018, when U.S. Representative
Marjorie Taylor Greene suggested that the
Camp Fire wildfires in Butte County, California were caused by lasers which were emitted from "space solar generators" in a scheme which companies such as
Rothschild & Co and
Solaren were involved in. Despite her denial of antisemitic intent in relation to her belief in this theory, supporters of Greene quickly blamed the wildfires on Jews. Greene was condemned by the
Republican Jewish Coalition, the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, and
Christians United for Israel. Journalist and author Mike Rothschild, who is unrelated to
the Rothschilds, also condemned these statements. In 2002, the then-
Hamas leader
Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi asked, "People always talk about what the
Germans did to the Jews, but the true question is, 'What did the Jews do to the Germans?
Gilad Atzmon stated, "Jewish texts tend to glaze over the fact that Hitler's 28 March 1933, ordering a boycott against Jewish stores and goods, was an escalation in direct response to the
declaration of war on Germany by the worldwide Jewish leadership." In January 2005, 19 members of the Russian
State Duma demanded that Judaism and Jewish organizations be banned in Russia, alleging that "most antisemitic actions in the whole world are constantly carried out by Jews themselves with a goal of provocation." After sharp protests by Russian Jewish leaders, including Russia's Chief Rabbi
Berel Lazar, human rights activists and the
Russian Foreign Ministry, the
Duma members retracted their appeal.
Cowardice and lack of patriotism ,
Warsaw With the rise of
racist theories in the 19th century, "[a]nother old anti-Semitic canard served to underline the putative 'femininity' of the Jewish race. Like women, Jews lacked an 'essence. In
Genocide and Gross Human Rights Violations, Kurt Jonassohn and Karin S. Björnson wrote: Jews were frequently accused of being insufficiently patriotic. In late 19th-century France, a
political scandal known as the
Dreyfus affair involved the wrongful
conviction for
treason of a young Jewish French officer. The political and judicial scandal ended with his full rehabilitation. During
World War I, the German Military High Command implemented the '''' (German for "Jewish Census"), which was designed to "confirm" allegations of the "lack of patriotism" among German Jews, but the results of the census disproved the accusations and were not made public. After the end of the war, the
stab-in-the-back myth alleged that internal enemies, including Jews, were responsible for Germany's defeat. In
Stalin's Soviet Union, the
statewide campaign against "
rootless cosmopolitans", a Soviet
euphemism for Jews, was set out on 28 January 1949 with an article in the party's official newspaper
Pravda: Such propaganda was followed by state campaigns of persecution until Stalin's death in 1953, which involved
mass termination of Soviet Jewish doctors and
liquidation of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee based on false charges of treason, espionage and association with Zionism. The anniversary of the murders was commemorated by
Soviet Jewry Movement's activists from the 1960s until the end of the Soviet Union. In 1968, the Soviet-supported
Polish People's Republic exploited
pre-existing antisemitism to peddle similar claims, equating Jewish origins with "disloyalty" and "Zionist sympathies", to blame
Polish Jews for the
anti-communist mass protests. A purge of Polish Jews, most of whom were Holocaust survivors, ensued. The purge caused the exodus of 5,000–10,000 Polish Jews – around 20–33% of those remaining back then. An apology was made by the democratic Polish government in March 2018.
Ethnocentrism Many antisemitic conspiracy theory websites cherry-picked quotes from Jewish religious writings to justify the libel that Judaism is "racist [...] teaching Jews to hate non-Jews." As per rabbi
Joseph Soloveitchik, As per the minutes of a 1984 U.S. Congress hearing concerning the
Soviet Jewry, the demonization of Jews based on bogus "ethnocentrism" charges was common:
Fabricating or exaggerating the Holocaust Holocaust denial consists of claims that the
genocide of Jews during
World War II – usually referred to as
the Holocaust – did not occur at all, or it did not happen in the manner or to the extent which is historically recognized. Key elements of these claims are the rejection of the following facts: Most Holocaust denial claims imply, or openly state, that the Holocaust is a "hoax" committed out of a "deliberate
Jewish conspiracy" to advance the "Jewish interests". Nowadays, outright denial is no longer socially acceptable. It has, however, morphed into more devious forms involving antisemitic tropes' usage to
distort relevant events for fabricating Jewish guilt and legitimizing antisemitism. Distortion of the Holocaust refers,
inter alia, to intentional efforts to excuse or minimize the
impact of the Holocaust or its principal elements, including
collaborators and allies of Nazi Germany. Other factors are gross minimization of the number of the victims of the Holocaust, in contradiction to reliable sources, and attempts to
blame the Jews for causing their own genocide. Statements have been made casting the Holocaust as a positive historical event. Those statements are not Holocaust denial but are closely connected to it as a
radical form of antisemitism. They may suggest that the Holocaust did not go far enough in accomplishing its goal of "the
Final Solution of the Jewish Question". Finally, there have been attempts to
blur the responsibility for the establishment of
concentration and death camps devised and operated by Nazi Germany by putting blame on other nations or ethnic groups. As such, Holocaust denial is antisemitic. Holocaust deniers are condemned for ignoring all the evidence disproving their falsehood. Holocaust deniers include the late "anti-Zionist"
Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, former
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmedinejad, late
Hezbollah leader
Hassan Nasrallah, late
French professor
Robert Faurisson,
French teacher
Vincent Reynouard,
British author
David Irving and
Germar Rudolf. In 2010, a poll found that 56% of citizens in Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco and the
UAE believed that the Jews "deserved the Holocaust", most of whom were found to hold the false beliefs that In 2014, another global survey found that almost half of the world did not know that the Holocaust ever happened, making them more susceptible to the tropes as mentioned.
Holocaust inversion on February 16, 2003, which incorporated both the motifs of "
money-minded Jews" and "
Zio-Nazis". The slur
ZIONIST PIGS was also used., 2003, equating the
Star of David with the dollar and
Nazi swastika Scholars have noted that "the main motif in Arab
cartoons about Israel features 'the devilish Jew and that the central antisemitic idea of portraying Jews as embodiments of absolute evil includes several recurring sub-themes. These themes have reappeared throughout history, though their form has changed depending on the dominant narratives of each era. Such demonization by association with Israel is termed the
Holocaust inversion.
Holocaust inversion is an inversion of reality where Jews, the Holocaust's primary victims, are transposed into being the primary perpetrators to erase their
historical victimhood and justify antisemitism. It is deemed a form of
Holocaust trivialization. The
World Jewish Congress noted that
Holocaust inversion could be manifested as: In such regard, the French philosopher
Bernard-Henri Lévy remarked,
Zio,
Zio-Nazi and even
Zionist are used deceptively by antisemites to promote antisemitism while maintaining
plausible deniability.
David Duke, the former
KKK's
Grand Wizard, reportedly invented
Zio as an anti-Jewish slur based on
Zionism's popularity among
contemporary Jews, especially in the
United States and
United Kingdom.
Holocaust historian Yehuda Bauer saw
Zio-Nazi as
hate speech, while the
Meta restricted these terms on
Facebook and
Instagram.
Yossi Klein Halevi, the author of
The New York Times bestseller
Letters to My Palestinian Neighbor, considered the trope a transmutation of an archaic dehumanizing motif of Jews: Nevertheless, it is notable that
Cold War communist regimes, including the Soviet Union and its
puppet state in Poland, had an often neglected history of
persecuting their Jewish subjects based on "anti-Zionism".
Controlling the Atlantic slave trade Exploiting the
pre-existing racial tension between Black and Jewish Americans, antisemites have exaggerated Jews' role in the
Atlantic slave trade in an attempt to
demonize them in the eyes of
Black Americans. The belief that Jews "orchestrated" the Atlantic slave trade is the central
tenet of the American
Islamist hate group Nation of Islam (NOI), led by
Louis Farrakhan. A number of historians, including
Saul S. Friedman, conducted research into the matter. Friedman published the book
Jews and the American Slave Trade to summarise his findings, concluding that Jewish involvement in the Atlantic slave trade was negligible, thereby disproving the rumour. Also, in 1995, the
American Historical Association (AHA) explicitly condemned "any statement alleging that Jews played a disproportionate role in the Atlantic slave trade".
Organ harvesting Palestinians In August 2009, an article in the Swedish tabloid accused Israeli troops of harvesting organs from Palestinians who died in their custody. Henrik Bredberg wrote in the rival newspaper : "
Donald Boström publicized a variant of an anti-Semitic classic, the Jew who abducts children and steals their blood." In a video published on their website on 23 August 2014,
Time magazine quoted the 2009 Swedish 's accusation as fact and later on 24 August 2014 retracted the allegations that Israeli soldiers had harvested and sold Palestinian organs. The pro-Israel NGO
HonestReporting published an article criticising
Time for "giving new life to a horrendous blood libel". In December 2009, Israel's
Channel 2 published an interview with
Yehuda Hiss, the former chief pathologist at
L. Greenberg Institute of Forensic Medicine, where he accused workers at the forensic institute of taking skin, corneas, heart valves and bones from deceased Israelis, Palestinians and foreign workers without permission in the 1990s. Hiss was dismissed as head of
Abu Kabir in 2004 after discovery of the use of organs. Israeli officials acknowledged that isolated incidents had taken place, but the vast majority of cases involved Israeli citizens and no such incidents had occurred for a protracted period, while Hiss had already been removed from his position. Despite this, similar accusations are still made by different members of society, including the Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor. During the 2023–present
Gaza war conspiracy theories were spread that the
IDF was harvesting the organ of Palestinians. There has been no evidence presented to substantiate this outside of claims made by the
Gaza Ministry of Health. Despite this the claim has been spread and been used to incite anti-Jewish sentiments online.
Haiti In the immediate aftermath of the
2010 Haiti earthquake, Israel sent 120 staff, doctors and troops of the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to
Port-au-Prince. The IDF set up a
field hospital that performed 316 surgeries and delivered 16 babies. On 18 January, an American "activist" called
T. West posted a YouTube video calling on Haitians to be wary of "personalities who are out for money", which he referred to as the
Israeli Defense Force (IDF). To explain his allegations, West stated that in the past "the IDF [had] participated in stealing organ transplants of Palestinians and others", thus echoing the
Aftonbladet Israel controversy. West, who claimed to speak for a black-empowerment group called AfriSynergy Productions, stopped short of making more explicit accusations against the IDF's behaviour in Haiti but he noted that there was "little monitoring" of it in the quake's aftermath, insinuating that
organ theft was at the very least a strong possibility. The Iranian state outlet
Press TV promoted the allegations. again without citing any evidence. On 27 January, a Syrian TV reporter described T. West's video as "document[ing] this heinous crime and [...] show[ing] Israelis engaged in stealing organs from the earthquake victims" (despite the fact that the video quite evidently does no such thing). On 1 February 2010, "
The Palestine Telegraph" accused the IDF of
harvesting organs in Haiti for sale based on the said YouTube video by T. West whose material was re-used from
Hezbollah's
Al-Manar TV. In the United Kingdom, Baroness
Jenny Tonge was removed from her role as Liberal Democrat health spokeswoman as a result of an interview in which she suggested that an independent inquiry should be established. Israeli media and Jewish groups fought back against the claims immediately.
9/11 conspiracy theories Some conspiracy theories hold that Jews or Israel played a key role in carrying out the
September 11 attacks. As per a paper published by the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL), "anti-Semitic conspiracy theories have not been accepted in mainstream circles in the U.S.", but "this is not the case in the Arab and Muslim world". A claim that 4,000 Jewish employees skipped work at the WTC on 11 September has been widely reported and widely debunked. The number of Jews who died in the attacks – typically estimated at 400 – tracks closely with the proportion of Jews living in the New York area. Five Israelis died in the attack. In 2003, the ADL published a report which attacked "hateful conspiracy theories" that the 9/11 attacks were carried out by Israelis and Jews, saying that they had the potential to "rationalize and fuel global anti-Semitism". The ADL's report found that "The
Big Lie has united the American far-right, white supremacists and the Arab and Muslim world". It also found that many of those were modern manifestations of the
Protocols of the Elders of Zion. The ADL has characterized the
Jeff Rense website as carrying antisemitic materials, such as "American Jews staged the 9/11 terrorist attacks for their own financial gain and to induce the American people to endorse wars of aggression and
genocide on the nations of the Middle East and the theft of their resources for the benefit of Israel". Accusations of Jews masterminding the 9/11 attacks have also been made by the
black supremacist New Black Panther Party (NBPP), which have gained traction among anti-Zionist Black Americans.
Jews as a separate species A number of fringe researchers, including
Stan Gooch and Michael Bradley, have hypothesized that Jews have significantly more
Neanderthal ancestry than non-Jews, or even that they are
mainly Neanderthal in origin (in contrast to Gentiles who are considered the descendants of
Cro-Magnons). These theories have been picked up by antisemitic writers and publications such as
Instauration,
Willis Carto, and
Barnes Review, who claim Jews are a different species locked in an
ecological rivalry versus other humans, and that their Neanderthal heritage results in increased aggression and an innate drive to dominate their surroundings. According to this view, both Judaism itself as well as antisemitism are rationalizations for a much older, atavistic conflict between the two populations. A 2021 paper in an anthropology journal argued that antisemitic caricatures of Jews have consistently depicted them with Neanderthal-like physical traits, even before modern reconstructions of Neanderthal appearance became widely available. The paper suggested that this could be due to a lingering folk memory of
anatomically modern human encounters with Neanderthals, which was first preserved through legends and depictions of mythological creatures (e.g.
trolls), and later transferred to population groups seen as "
other", especially Jews. Prior to the discovery of Neanderthals,
polygenists believed that each "race" was descended from an entirely separate act of creation by God; Jews were frequently listed as one of these "races". Some, but not all, proponents of this view used it to attack Jews. == Contradictory accusations ==