Vicious anti-Semitism has long been present on the radical right, and of late, it has been growing also on the radical left as well. It’s also a cornerstone of radical Muslim movements. Although these three sources of anti-Semitism in the world today come from very different traditions, they are increasingly sharing ideas and tactics, reinforcing a wave of hate, bigotry and racism.
In recent years, North America has joined Europe to witness a growing alliance between radical Muslims and radical leftists. Radical Muslims stone women, execute gays, trample on minority and human rights, and abhor feminism. On paper, the far left should be appalled by this ideology, but these unlikely allies cast aside their differences because they share a common hatred for Western influence worldwide, pluralistic nationalism, freedom of speech, tolerance and vile anti-Semitism.
How does the radical left turn a blind eye to radical Islam’s very bigoted ideas, such as its treatment of women and minorities? How can it ignore radical Muslims’ conviction as to the superiority of Islamic morals and culture? It infantilizes Muslims and portrays Islam as a monolithic block. In doing so, it fails to distinguish between mainstream Muslims and radicals, and tokenizes them as “a people oppressed by the West.”
In the radical left’s warped and ahistorical worldview, Israel is a colonialist oppressor targeting Muslims. And straight from the Elders of Zion itself, Jews are an all-powerful group who are at fault for every problem in the Middle East and rest of the world.
This alliance is typified by political activist Linda Sarsour, one of the organizers of the Women’s March on Washington, D.C., who is now hailed on the left as a feminist leader despite her admiration for the vile misogyny of Sharia law. She called a Jewish journalist a member of the anti-Semitic alt-right. She opened her “jihad against Trump” speech by thanking Siraj Wajjah, an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. She has praised Saudi Arabia’s treatment of women. Yet she is held up as a role model on the left.
This alliance is growing. In September, leftist students at Tufts University published a “Disorientation Guide” that attacked the university’s Hillel and called Israel a “white supremacist” state. It exposed the depth of anti-Semitism among leftists on college campuses and demonstrated how these groups use the same rhetoric as radical Muslim groups that call Israel a colonial occupier. One of the guide’s writers claimed this was not anti-Semitic because she herself was Jewish.
A similar guide at New York University myopically condemns Israel, referencing the country 55 times—more than the number of references to “Trump,” “alt-right,” “racism,” “fascism,” “white supremacy” and “socialism” combined.
Two recent rally events in Chicago further illustrate this trend. The Chicago Dyke March last summer, an event created to celebrate the LGBT community, expelled three people for having Stars of David on their pride flags, combining two symbols central to their identity. A few months later at SlutWalk Chicago, an event intended to oppose sexual assault, Zionists who marched were derided for trying to participate and condemned by organizers. The organizers then encouraged the walkers to attend a speech by Rasmea Odeh, a Palestinian terrorist convicted of killing two Jewish students; she believes her actions were justified and was recently deported from the United States.
This strange allegiance between Islamic radicals and radical leftists was famously on display during the Iranian revolution of the late 1970s, when the Ayatollah Khomeini overthrew the moderate shah with the support of leftists and Islamists, and in turn, was quick to empower the radical Muslims and decimate the radical left.
The 3,000-old Jewish population of Iran—some 100,000 Jews—could sense the inherent anti-Semitism of the radical leftists and their hatred of the West before and during the Iranian revolution. They wound up emigrating in large numbers as fast as they could, mostly to the United States and Israel.
Just as the far left has a history of vilifying the nation state of the Jewish people (and the Jews who support it), the right has colluded with radical Muslims to spread its pure hatred of Jews and the desire to brutally subjugate—or worse, murder—the Jewish people.
Radical Islamic nationalists also have a history of collaborating with the right when the opportunity presents itself. The Grand Mufti of Jerusalem told Adolf Hitler that Germans and Arabs have the same enemies: “the English, the Jews and the Communists.” And Rashid Ali al-Gaylani, the prime minister of Iraq at the time who was encouraged by the mufti, initiated the Farhud, a horrific pogrom, under Nazi influence and allegiance. Today, the rhetoric of neo-Nazis is rife with conspiracy theories and centuries-old stereotypes about blood libel, echoing the rhetoric of radical Islamist terrorists and even radical Muslims.
What’s most concerning about the rise of anti-Semitism is how the ideology has entered the mainstream.
For instance, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders recently campaigned for UK Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn, who has worked closely with anti-Semitic conspiracy theorist Paul Eisen, author of a blog titled “My Life as a Holocaust Denier.” Sanders wouldn’t campaign for a socialist who was a sexist, a racist, a homophobe or Islamophobe, but he was willing to campaign for an anti-Semite because leftist organizations encourage anti-Semitism.
Radical Muslims are focused on destroying and delegitimizing Israel—the historic homeland of the Jewish people—and they fan the flames of anti-Semitism wherever they can to reach that goal, whether among those working to stop racism in present-day America, working to grab power in 1940s’ Iraq or boycotting Israel through the BDS movement. By allying with the radical left, they are building a coalition that seeks to destroy Western values of freedom, democracy and tolerance—the foundational principles of America and of Israel, the only democracy in the Middle East.
The growth of this alliance and the mainstreaming of anti-Semitic leftism, especially on college campuses, threaten not only life in America, but the future of the Jewish people around the world.