Michal Cotler-Wunsh: 50 years since UN resolution, the world proves anti-Zionism is actually racism
Anti-Zionism, as clearly articulated in the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) Working Definition of Antisemitism after a long democratic process, is denying Israel’s right to exist as a state and denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination. It is discriminating against Israelis and turning the Jew among nations into all that is evil, a pariah responsible for all that is bad in the world.
Fifty years later, and as the past two years since the October 7 Kristallnacht-moment of our times have made abundantly clear, it is anti-Zionism – denying Jewish identity, memory, heritage, peoplehood, and ancestry – that is racism.
It is racism that has again been normalized and legitimized in the name of “liberation,” “justice,” and “progress,” this time by hijacking, redefining, inverting, and weaponizing foundational principles upon which the UN was founded, betraying all it was entrusted to uphold, promote, and protect. It is racism that not only endangers Israel, but all who believe in its right to exist, and the rights of Jews around the world. To paraphrase the late Rabbi Sacks, what begins with the Jews never ends with us.
“There will be time enough to contemplate the harm this act will have done the United Nations.” Fifty years later, Moynihan’s words have become a devastating reality. The institution entrusted to ensure that “Never Again,” by anyone to anyone, seats the most egregious violators of human rights around the Human Rights Council table. It hosts tyrannical regime leaders who invoke the language of rights, even as they torture, execute, and trample the rights of their people. In what has become a modern-day Tower of Babel, it collapses every foundational principle upon which it was constructed.
In a social-media age guided by a polarizing, fragmentizing business model, in which history has little resonance, what happens at the UN and the human rights industry created to support it does not remain there. Academic institutions, no longer pursuing truth in what has been dubbed a post-truth era, have seemingly replaced the mission of teaching how to think with agendas that indoctrinate generations on what to think. Bot-generated hashtags and buzzwords make their way around the world in TikTok videos, in Instagram reels, and in X/Twitter posts, before the (post)truth “straps its boots on.” Fifty years after the UN declared that Zionism is racism, leaders across spaces and places openly declare that they are not antisemitic, only anti–Zionist, generating popular support and little challenge.
Fifty years later, if we are to learn anything from history that repeats in rhyme, it is not enough to teach what happened. It is vital to understand how it happened, and can happen again, with the same mechanism of demonization, delegitimization, and double standards. It is imperative to insist that the law be applied equally and consistently by the institutions mandated to protect foundational principles. For “Never Again” to mean anything, it is vital to not only remember the past but also recognize present iterations of evil to prevent future recurrence of atrocities.
We must remember, reclaim, and renew the Jewish story, universal principles of human rights, and the commitment to uphold and protect foundational principles. In a raging war of barbarism openly declaring the intent to destroy our shared civilization, it is also a vital step toward protecting humanity and freedom.
The Palestinian Fantasy State
The idea of a Palestinian state exists only in the European imagination; even the Arabs do not truly believe in it.Lyn Julius: The settler-colonial lie, debunked
While Israel recognized the national identity of the Palestinians, they have never recognized the Jews as a people entitled to national self-determination.
Before Israel captured Judea, Samaria and eastern Jerusalem in 1967, those territories were controlled by Jordan and Egypt. Why, then, was no Palestinian state established at that time?
The answer is that the Palestinians never wanted a state of their own alongside Israel. They only wanted a state instead of Israel.
Had the Jews lost the 1948 War of Independence, the Arabs of the region would have slaughtered them as they did on Oct. 7, and then divided the land among themselves - southern Syria, northern Egypt and western Jordan.
In fact, Israel is the only decolonization project in the Middle East, an indigenous people that has managed to throw off the yoke of Arab and Ottoman dominance. And yet many people assume that political rights only belong to Arab Muslims.
Indeed, there were high hopes at the end of World War I, with the dismemberment of the Ottoman Empire, that indigenous Christian and other minorities would be given enclaves affording them special protection. The Assyrians and Kurds both expected to have autonomy, if not a homeland of their own. But only the Balfour Declaration of 1917, with its commitment for a home for the Jews, was endorsed at the 1920 San Remo conference and written into the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne.
For Khalidi, the settler colonial lie is “not just hypocrisy; it’s historical amnesia. If we truly want justice, we have to stop gaslighting our neighbors and start acknowledging that their story is Middle Eastern, too. Our liberation won’t come from denying theirs.”
Why is it that so few Arab voices of moderation are out there, while Western far-leftists, in alliance with Islamists, almost all espouse extremist positions or traffic lies about Israel or Jews?
The smear that Israel is a white colonial-settler state relies on two false premises: It severs Jews from their Middle Eastern ethno-religious roots and denies that Jews are a people distinct from the Diaspora, in which they spent 2,000 years. Israelophobes brand Judaism a matter of faith, like Christianity or Islam. They refuse to believe that Jews are distinct genetically, culturally, linguistically and historically from the many populations they lived among.
In order to depict Zionism as a European imposter, the anti-Zionists date the rise of modern Zionism to 1882 and the arrival of the Russian Jews of the first aliyah. In truth, Jews never left. Through the centuries, they returned, albeit in small numbers, to Eretz Israel.
To keep the memory of the 850,000 Jews forced to leave Arab countries and Iran in the 20th century alive, organizations such as JIMENA (Jews Indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa) and HARIF (the Association of Jews from the MENA), along with synagogues and community groups around the world, will observe “Mizrachi Heritage Month” throughout November.
The Israeli Knesset designated an official “Mizrachi Heritage Day” in the calendar on Nov. 30, the day after the U.N. Partition Plan for Palestine was passed in 1947, which triggered riots across Arab countries.
History matters. We must not let the truth be drowned out by crude and dishonest sloganeering. We must keep repeating the facts. And any help from Arab members of society is welcome.
— 🚀aunch The Crypto Dog 📈 (@CryptoDogLaunch) November 15, 2025
This might be the single stupidest person in progressive media.
— Coddled Affluent Professional (@feelsdesperate) November 15, 2025
She thinks the UN should run an experiment in 1-state, enforced ‘multiculturalism’ combining Israel and Palestinian territories which would of course devolve instantaneously into chaos, civil war, death, and… https://t.co/pTF5f8xZGg





















