On elite campuses, professors and students chant for the destruction of Israel, cloaking genocidal hatred in the language of “justice” and “liberation.”. Anti-Zionism is Claimed To be different than anti-Semitism even by twisted Jews.
The world’s hatred of the Jewish people is not new. It is the oldest hatred in human history. The script hasn’t changed in three thousand years: the Jew dares to exist on his own terms, and the nations cannot stand it.
In the Middle Ages, it was blood libels and expulsions. England expelled its Jews in 1290, Spain in 1492. Jews were blamed for plagues, accused of poisoning wells, and herded into ghettos. Not because of crime or conspiracy — but because of covenant. The Jewish people, stubbornly surviving, were a living rebuke to Christian theology that claimed we were cast off and abandoned. Our survival embarrassed Europe. So it tried to erase us.
The Holocaust was not an accident of German madness. It was the modern, industrialized expression of the same ancient obsession: the world without Jews would be cleaner, purer, easier. Six million Jews were murdered not because of what they had done but because of who they were. The ovens of Auschwitz were stoked with the same fire that lit the Roman arenas and medieval pyres.
Islamic history offers no respite. Jews under Islam were permitted to live only as subjugated dhimmis — taxed, humiliated, and reminded daily of their inferior status. When Jews forgot their place, pogroms reminded them. The 20th-century rise of political Islam, fueled by the rhetoric of Hassan al-Banna, Sayyid Qutb, and Ayatollah Khomeini, only amplified the theological hatred. Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran speak openly of annihilation. They do not hide their goal: a world without Jews, starting with a world without Israel.
And here we are, 2025. Europe once again trembles with Jewish blood. Synagogues guarded by soldiers. Cemeteries desecrated. Politicians issue empty condemnations even as they coddle Islamist votes. In America, Jews are assaulted in the streets of New York and Los Angeles., cloaking genocidal hatred in the language of “justice” and “liberation.” The far-right blames Jews for immigration. The far-left blames Jews for colonialism. The noose tightens from both sides.
Why? Because the Jew is an eternal reminder that history has meaning. That God has expectations. That man is not sovereign. Pharaoh, Haman, Caesar, Torquemada, Hitler, Hamas — all different faces of the same rage: the world cannot bear a people who carry a divine covenant. As long as a single Jew lives, mankind cannot declare itself free from judgment.
And yet — every empire that set out to annihilate us is gone. Egypt? Dust. Babylon? Ruins. Rome? A broken memory. The Third Reich? Ashes. The Soviet Union? Collapsed into history’s trash heap. And the Jew? Still here. Back in his land. Speaking his ancient tongue.
This is the paradox that infuriates the nations: the more they try to destroy us, the more we prove indestructible. “Behold, a people that dwells alone, not reckoned among the nations” The hatred of the nations confirms the chosenness of Israel.
So let the world rage. Let the UN pass its resolutions. Let the mobs chant in the streets. We have seen it all before. The hatred runs deep — but our survival runs deeper. For three thousand years they have tried to bury us. And for three thousand years we have risen from the grave.
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