![]() | This article may lack focus or may be about more than one topic.(March 2025) |
Normalization of antisemitism refers to the shift of anti-Jewish hate from fringe to mainstream. [1] Through the years, various scholars have examined the normalization of antisemitism in their works, analyzing its persistence and evolving manifestations.
In "Normalization of antisemitism, 1880–1900: the case of a Jesuit community in Rome", David Dahl analyzed the dynamics within La Civiltà Cattolica that led to its gradual acceptance of antisemitism in the late 19th century. [2]
In “The ‘Jewish Question’, Hungarian sociology and the normalisation of antisemitism”, Kati Voros described the transformation of antisemitic rhetoric into “what was seen as legitimate social analysis and political critique” within sociological theory in Hungary between 1900 and 1920. [3]
In Alternative für Deutschland: The AfD: Germany's New Nazis or another Populist Party? (Liverpool University Press, 2020), Thomas Klikauer noted that "both AfD and FPÖ work towards the normalisation of Antisemitism, thereby mainstreaming fascism". [4]
In 2019, Miriam Elman and Asaf Romirowsky attributed "a significant growth in the normalization of antisemitism" to the impact of the BDS movement. [5]
In 2024, Lili Levi called the deployment of antisemitism as a political tool a sign of the normalization of antisemitism in the US, noting that Democrats and Republicans accuse each other of complicity in antisemitism. [6] Erica Cervini noted that the normalization of antisemitism had led to increasing attacks on Jewish individuals and businesses, and to students feeling unsafe on university campuses in Australia. [7]
A 2016 New York Historical Society exhibit, Antisemitism: 1919-1939, addressed how anti-Jewish hatred "can permeate a national discourse and become ‘normal’ for ordinary people”. In addition to newspaper clippings, excerpts from Hitler's speeches, a printing of the Nuremberg laws, and park bench signs forbidding Jews, the exhibit focused on children's toys and books which desensitized German children toward antisemitic tropes from an early age. [8]
In 2018, the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights conducted its second survey on antisemitism in the European Union and issued a report with the statement "Antisemitic harassment is so common that it becomes normalised". [9]
In 2022, PBS featured an episode called "The Normalization of Antisemitism" as part of its Exploring Hate initiative produced by Metrofocus. Interviewees included Atlantic reporter Yair Rosenberg, historian Pamela Nadell, and Race Forward executive VP Eric K. Ward. Host Jenna Flanagan introduced the topic with the assertion by "Jewish leaders and allies" that "celebrities, politicians, and media personalities" were increasingly welcoming antisemites onto their platforms and amplifying antisemitic rhetoric. Flanagan called Ye's praise of Hitler, Donald Trump's dinner with Nick Fuentes, Kyrie Irving's promotion of a film denying the Holocaust, and Dave Chapelle's elevation of antisemitic tropes on SNL "the tip of the iceberg". Ward commented that antisemitism "is not a form of religious bigotry. It’s a form of racialized bigotry." [1]
The May 2023 US Biden-Harris National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism, [10] a 60-page document issued by the White House, [11] [12] called its third pillar “Reverse the Normalization of Antisemitism and Counter Antisemitic Discrimination: Whole-of-Society Calls to Action”. [13] Strategic goal 3.1 called for “meaningful accountability for antisemitic conduct” in order to “roll back the normalization of antisemitism”. [13] [14] The American Bar Association endorsed those goals in a 2024 statement. [13]
In December 2023, following the October 7 Hamas-led attacks on Israel, Representatives Jerrold Nadler, Daniel Goldman, and Jamie Raskin introduced a resolution calling for implementation of the National Strategy. Commenting on the resolution, Congressman Goldman decried “the normalization of antisemitism on our college campuses, on social media, and in our communities”. [15] NCJW CEO Sheila Katz told US officials including Secretary of Education Cardona that she was witnessing a 'normalization of antisemitism', and they agreed with data showing that antisemitic incidents had reached unprecedented levels, [16] as in Canada [17] and other countries. [18]
In 2022, Hen Mazzig decried the paucity of knowledge about the Holocaust among younger Americans. Mazzig called for more deterrence of antisemitic crimes, calling them “a ‘canary in the coal mine’ indicating that tolerance and democracy itself are in severe distress”. [19]
Raheli Baratz of the World Zionist Organization authored a report on behalf of the WZO and the Jewish Agency for Israel showing that global antisemitic incidents were 340% higher in 2024 than in 2022. The report detailed the increasing use of the term “Zionism” and its derivatives as a euphemism in antisemitic expressions. Baratz commented, “This is not a coincidence — it is a deliberate change in language aimed at making antisemitism socially acceptable”. [20]
Dara Horn described how the USSR labeled Zionism as “racism” and “colonialism,” eventually exporting those smears to "social-justice-minded circles in the United States". [21] Jonathan Greenblatt wrote that the ADL’s surveys noted an increase in the percentage of Americans who harbored “extensive antisemitic views” from 9% in 2014, to 20% in 2022, to 24% in 2024, adding “antisemitism can no longer be considered a fringe belief”. [22]
In 2025, Deborah Lipstadt, the US Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism, said in Brussels: "We are at an inflection point. Antisemitism is becoming increasingly normalized...[antisemitic comments] are freely heard on streets of some of our leading Western democracies in many countries, including this country." [23] David Hirsh noted that in British politics, antisemitism was considered "outside of the boundaries of democratic discourse" from World War II until Jeremy Corbin's leadership of the Labour Party. He added that currently, expressing support for Zionism "will get you completely marginalized" in many professions. [24]
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”. [25]
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. [26]
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”. [27]
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". [28] He called out "our major media" for minimizing occurrences of antisemitism at college campus protests. [28] Congressman Ritchie Torres called out a video game maker for "normalizing the most monstrous forms of antisemitic violence and terror—like beheadings, suicide bombings, and the war crimes of October 7th". [29] Senator John Fetterman noted that “It's crazy now that [Zionism] becomes a slur in certain circles,” adding that “it’s been turned into like, ‘you Zionist,’ or whatever, it’s crazy.” [30]