Pundits express surprise when antisemitism and Zionism overlap, but the ideologies share much in common—and many adherents.
LAST NOVEMBER, the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) awarded Donald Trump its highest honor, the Theodor Herzl Gold Medallion. Nine days later, the former president dined with two of America’s most prominent antisemites, rapper Kanye West and white nationalist provocateur Nick Fuentes. Noting the proximity of the two events, The New Yorker’s Isaac Chotiner asked ZOA president Morton Klein an uncomfortable question: Could Trump be among those “people who, for whatever reason, have sympathies with Israel but don’t like Jews?” Klein dismissed the proposition. “If you like Israel, which is the Jewish state filled with Jews, how can you hate Jews?” he replied. “It’s beyond my comprehension.”
The exchange illustrated the terms of mainstream American debate about the relationship between antisemitism and political Zionism, the belief in a Jewish state. For conservatives like Klein, the relationship is clear: Zionism and antisemitism are incompatible. The former precludes the latter. For liberals like Chotiner, by contrast, the relationship is obscure. “For whatever reason,” Trump loves Israel but derides American Jews. When faced with the coexistence of Zionism and antisemitism, liberals and centrists tend to describe the two beliefs as either unrelated or in tension. In October, an MSNBC commentator tried to reconcile Trump’s antisemitism and his Zionism by suggesting that he “didn’t necessarily understand his own policies” toward the Jewish state. A Politico essay in December described the Christian right’s support for Israel and distrust of American Jews as ideological “contradictions.”
But these positions are not contradictions at all. Trump’s fondness for Israel and antagonism toward American Jews stem from the same impulse: He admires countries that ensure ethnic, racial, or religious dominance. He likes Israel because its political system upholds Jewish supremacy; he resents American Jews because most of them oppose the white Christian supremacy he’s trying to fortify here. This synthesis isn’t unique to Trump. Since Zionism’s birth in Europe more than a century ago, it has attracted support from Christians who supported a Jewish state at least in part because they feared Jews would undermine the ethnic and religious purity of their own countries. That tradition remains alive in both Europe and the United States today, where research suggests that antagonism towards the Jews in one’s own nation correlates with support for Israel, which offers Jews a nation of their own. Most Zionists aren’t antisemites, of course. But neither are Zionism and antisemitism strange bedfellows. Often, they are different manifestations of the same preference: for nations built on homogeneity and hierarchy rather than diversity and equal citizenship. As such, they are frequent allies in the assault on liberal democracy sweeping much of the world.
THE AMERICAN MEDIA’S inattention to the links between Zionism and antisemitism stands in stark contrast to its preoccupation with the links between anti-Zionism and antisemitism. Again and again, prominent commentators insist they are one and the same. Even analysts who acknowledge some theoretical difference between the two often describe them as close cousins. In a conversation last fall, Yehuda Kurtzer of the Shalom Hartman Institute wondered at what point “anti-Zionism crosses over into antisemitism.” Anti-Zionists may not all be antisemites, according to this logic, just as hard drinkers may not all be alcoholics. But they’re at high risk.
In the United States and Europe, however, the evidence suggests the opposite: Anti-Zionists appear less likely to hold antisemitic attitudes than Zionists. Anti-Zionism is strongest on the political left. According to a Pew Research Center survey from last summer, only 36% of liberal Democrats viewed Israel favorably, compared to 75% of conservative Republicans. Antisemitism, by contrast, is strongest on the political right. In 2020, two political scientists, Eitan Hersh from Tufts and Laura Royden from Harvard, asked 3,500 Americans three questions about American Jews: Are they “more loyal to Israel than to America?”; is it “appropriate for opponents of Israel’s policies and actions to boycott Jewish American owned businesses?”; and do “Jews in the United States have too much power?” The results were stark. “Overt antisemitic attitudes are rare on the left,” concluded Hersh and Royden, “but common on the right.” Since left-leaning Americans are more hostile to Israel, the two scholars even added a preamble to their questions telling respondents that American Jews generally support the Jewish state. In so doing, they tested whether progressive anti-Zionism shades easily into antisemitism. Their conclusion: It does not. “Even when primed with information that most U.S. Jews have favorable views toward Israel,” they noted, “respondents on the left rarely support statements such as that Jews have too much power or should be boycotted.”
Research in Europe suggests something similar: Hostility to Israel and hostility to Jews are often inversely correlated. In 2021, András Kovács, a sociologist and professor of Jewish Studies at the Central European University, and György Fischer, the former research director for Gallup in Hungary, published a study entitled, “Antisemitic Prejudices in Europe,” They measured antisemitism by asking respondents to either affirm or reject statements like “The Jews suffering was a punishment from God,” “Jews have too much influence in this country” and “It’s always better to be a little cautious with Jews.”Kovács and Fischer did find one European population that expressed comparatively high levels of both anti-Zionism and antisemitism: Muslims. European Muslims were particularly likely to affirm antisemitic statements that linked Jews to Israel (for example, “When I think of Israel’s politics, I understand why some people hate Jews”). Among Europeans as a whole, however, it was Zionism—not anti-Zionism—that more often went hand-in-hand with antisemitism. Eastern European countries tended to be more pro-Israel and more anti-Jewish, Western European countries the reverse. Of the 16 nations surveyed, for instance, Poland was the most pro-Israel and the sixth most antisemitic. Romania was the third most pro-Israel and the fourth most antisemitic. By contrast, the country most hostile to Israel was Sweden, which registered the second lowest level of antisemitism. Third most hostile to Israel was Britain, the least antisemitic of all 16 nations surveyed.
When Kovács and Fischer searched for the factor that best predicted antisemitic attitudes, they found overwhelmingly that the answer was xenophobia. “These data,” they concluded, “indicate that antisemitism is largely a manifestation and consequence of resentment, distancing and rejection towards a generalised stranger.” As Kovács explained to me, the Europeans most hostile to Jews were also most hostile to Muslims, Roma, and LGBT people—other groups viewed as threatening the ethnic, religious, or cultural cohesion of their nations. And the Europeans most anxious about the ethnic, religious, and cultural cohesion of their nations tended to admire Israel, which jealously guards its own.
When Kovács and Fischer searched for the factor that best predicted antisemitic attitudes, they found overwhelmingly that the answer was xenophobia.
NONE OF THIS IS NEW. For more than a century, prominent European and American xenophobes have embraced Zionism because it offered Jews—who they didn’t want in their own countries—somewhere else to go.
Zionist leaders grasped this from the outset. In his 1882 manifesto Auto-Emancipation, often described as one of Zionism’s founding texts, the physician and Zionist activist Leon Pinsker explained that “the struggle of the Jews for national unity and independence” is “calculated to win the support of the people by whom we are now unwanted.” In 1895, Theodor Herzl confided in his diary that “the anti-Semites will become our most dependable friends.”
In the early 20th century, the most influential of those friends resided in Britain, which in 1917 committed itself to supporting “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people.” Many of the British officials who championed Zionism felt sympathy for Jews given their history of persecution and saw it as their Christian duty to restore Jews to their ancestral land. Yet mixed in with this benevolence were large doses of antisemitism. British leaders, writes the historian James Renton in his book The Zionist Masquerade: The Birth of the Anglo-Zionist Alliance, 1914-1918, saw “Jews as a clannish and perpetually foreign people.” Top British officials believed that Jews wielded enormous clandestine political and financial power, and thus, if Britain endorsed Zionism, American and Russian Jews would convince their governments to support it in its wartime struggle against Germany.
This stereotype of Jews as alien and insular also made British politicians fearful of allowing too many of them into the UK. Arthur Balfour, the foreign secretary who signed his name to Britain’s pledge to support the Zionist cause, had supported the British Aliens Act as prime minister in 1905, which sharply restricted Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe. In 1919, Balfour penned an introduction to Zionist leader Nahum Sokolow’s book, The History of Zionism. In it, Balfour argued that returning Jews to Palestine would “mitigate the age-long miseries created for Western civilization by the presence in its midst of a body which it too long regarded as alien and even hostile, but which it was equally unable to expel or to absorb.” Leo Amery, who helped draft the Balfour Declaration as war cabinet secretary, added that since British antisemitism “is based partly on the fear of being swamped by hordes of undesirable aliens from Russia,” that fear “will be much diminished when the hordes in question have got another outlet.”
It was precisely this linkage between Zionism and nativism that led some prominent British Jews to oppose the Balfour Declaration. Three months before it was issued, Edwin Montagu, the only Jewish member of Britain’s wartime cabinet, sent his colleagues a memo declaring that endorsing Zionism would prove “anti-Semitic in result.” He warned that “when the Jew has a national home [in Palestine], surely it follows that the impetus to deprive us of the rights of British citizenship must be enormously increased.” Montagu could not have been reassured when, two months after the cabinet threw its weight behind a Jewish home in Palestine, it voted to deport thousands of Russian Jewish refugees unless they joined the British army.