In 2019, the
World Council of Churches and the International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Consultations met in Paris for a conference on “The Normalisation of hatred: Challenges for Jews and Christians today”. The Reverend Peter Prove described “a new normalization of hatred, in which antisemitism, among many other old prejudices and discriminatory attitudes, is demonstrably on the rise today”. In a 2022 commentary for
WGBH called "Why the normalization of antisemitism is not just a crisis for Jews", Reverend
Irene Monroe cited the 2017 "
Unite the Right" rally and the
Colleyville synagogue hostage crisis as examples of rising
antisemitism in the United States. In 2022,
Northwestern University history professor
Peter Hayes said he was "very concerned" about the normalization of antisemitism, noting the increased "public discussion of things that used to be beneath contempt". In 2024, New York City Mayor
Eric Adams said that hatred was increasing toward various minority groups, adding "What troubles me the most is that we have normalized antisemitism". He called out "our major media" for minimizing occurrences of antisemitism at college
campus protests. Senator
John Fetterman noted that "It's crazy now that Zionist as a pejorative|[Zionism] becomes a slur in certain circles," adding that "it's been turned into like, 'you Zionist,' or whatever, it's crazy." In 2025, when
Joe Rogan hosted proponents of antisemitic conspiracy theories on his podcast, academics and political commentators categorized this as a normalization or mainstreaming of antisemitism.
Susan Benesch, founder of the
Dangerous Speech Project, noted that antisemites "mix criticism of Israel and antisemitism".
Ye's 2025 antisemitic song was noted to "normalize Nazi language". Critics contend that changes in the definition of antisemitism, particularly the inclusion of some criticism of Israel, account for part of the increase and normalization of antisemitism supported by surveys. == See also ==