International
Anti-Zionism, Not Anti-Semitism!
Zionism is the belief that the Jews should have a Jewish state in their ancestral homeland. Anti-Zionism, however, is the opposition to that belief.

The latest episode in the Israel-Palestine saga is the most gruesome in decades. And that is a statement given the bloodied history between the two peoples. For context, the combined death toll had already surpassed the figures of the last Intifada in the first fifteen days of combat. Now, one and half months after the Hamas attacks, more than 10,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza. While, ruefully, this is nothing new for the Gazans, October 7th was (statistically and emotionally) the most horrific day for Israelis since the Holocaust. Thus, while the recent crises passed without any notable scholarly effort at large to investigate and nitpick, I have seen some dense questions tossed in mainstream debate lately. Although I do not claim any expert authority on one of the most complex geopolitical issues in history, I do believe I owe some share of my modest knowledge to my readers to make some elemental sense of one question - Is anti-Zionism just a political cover over anti-Semitism?
Zionism, defined concisely, is the belief that the Jews should have a Jewish state in their ancestral homeland. Anti-Zionism, in similarly brief terms, is the opposition to that belief.
As an unbiased student of international relations and world history, one would be unfair to aver that Jews have no right whatsoever on the land they endear. The Jewish people ruled the historic Judean Kingdoms and prayed in the Jerusalem Temple for millennia. Even after spreading over centuries that followed, they were still present in small numbers for the next 2000 years. But on parallel lines, one would also be partisan to deny the Palestinian claim to the land. They also inhabited the land for centuries and held a clear majority over the remnants of Jewish ancestry. There is no doubt, nor is the legitimacy of their claim to their state contested by most learned scholars.
To highlight this history and oppose the existence of a religiously/ethnically defined state that is inherently racist is not anti-Semitic in any sense! For starters, the Jewish forebears didn’t even aspire to a ‘state’ when the British promised a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine in the Balfour Declaration - a 1917 letter written by British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour to a leader of the Jewish community. In 1918, Chaim Weismann - one of the founding Zionist leaders - met the Hashemite Prince Faisal Bin Hussein to discuss the Jews living under his rule as king of greater Syria. This shows that ‘return to the promised land’ was never really the plan!
Moreover, some prominent Jewish advocates concurred with the anti-Zionist theory of a single shared state between Jews and Palestinians before the founding of Israel. In 1921, the Jewish philosopher Ahad Ha’am wrote that Arab Palestinians “have a genuine right to the land due to generations of residence and work upon it. This country is a national home for them, and they have the right to develop their national potentialities to the utmost.” Even today, there are some eminent Jewish supporters of a single binational state, such as the former Knesset speaker Avraham Burg.
While I do realize that anti-Semitism remains pervasive in the world, decades after the near-destruction of European Jewry, I fail to understand how opposing the foundation of a terrorist state like Israel on logical grounds (not just by Arabs but even Jews) could be blatantly characterized as an anti-Semitic expression?
It is a cruel absurdity to demand of Palestinians (and their sympathizers worldwide) that they not only consent to Israel’s existence but also actively support the idea of an ethnically defined state that excludes them from equal citizenship - one that was made possible only by the flight and expulsion of 700,000 (or three-quarters) of the Palestinian population, driven from their home by Jewish terrorism and systematic ethnic cleansing, in the Nakba of 1948. It is not anti-Semitic to want equal rights in the land you ought to share with others, to oppose a political arrangement that has resulted in what Israeli human-rights groups justifiably describe as a form of apartheid.
I admit certain forms of anti-Zionism are anti-Semitic. The doctrine of Hamas is a case in point. These extremist views engender a belief that Jewish Israelis should all be expelled or killed or forced to live as second-class citizens under an Islamist government. But take a gander at Israel’s trail of violence, and you will realize an ironic reality - the state of Israel has a history of subjecting Palestinians to these exact conditions and then the audacity to demand recognition!
Palestinians have been displaced at gunpoint by Israeli settlers. Violent Israeli settlers in the West Bank distributed pamphlets on October 26th, warning of a second Nakba for the Palestinians: “You have a last opportunity to escape to Jordan. Afterward, we’ll drive you away by force from the holy land that God dedicated to us.” According to the United Nations, since the October 7th Hamas attack, at least 132 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank, including 41 children. More than 900 Palestinians have been forced from their homes in that period.
While Jewish Israelis retain their right wherever they go within Israel’s borders, Palestinians are subject to draconian restrictions on their lives and freedoms depending on their location.
Palestinians have been evicted from their homes in Jerusalem as part of an effort to Judaize the city. While Jewish Israelis retain their right wherever they go within Israel’s borders, Palestinians are subject to draconian restrictions on their lives and freedoms depending on their location. Since October 7th, they have been barred from praying in the Al-Aqsa mosque. With each passing day, desolate Palestinians in Gaza continue to watch their children die in Israeli missile strikes. (More than 4000 Palestinian children have been killed in one month). Are none of these people allowed to question whether a Jewish state is an optimal arrangement for them? Are none of their relatives, friends, and loved ones worldwide allowed to stand against this crystal clear genocide?
I advise my readers to observe the voices railing against pro-Palestinian protests worldwide, especially in the Western media. You won’t even require contextual relevance to detect that anti-Zionism is equated with anti-Semitism to silence the criticism of the Israeli government by Palestinians and their advocates. Characterizing all such criticism as an inherent form of bigotry is effectively used to justify the expulsion of such critics from mainstream society, to suspend them from their schools, or to fire them from their jobs – ultimately to stifle their voice and protest.
According to the Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, dozens of students (almost all of them Palestinian citizens of Israel) have been suspended or summoned to hearings before being suspended from their academic institutions on the charge that their statements in support of Gazans posted on social networks constitute support for terrorism. Academia for Equality has also identified at least three university lecturers in Israeli institutions who were summoned to similar hearings.
Opposing the systemic massacre of a people does not constitute hatred for an entire religion or ethnicity. It is like being called Islamophobic if you oppose ISIS! Today, many Jews around the world are standing in support of the beleaguered Palestinians. And it heartens me that the world is finally progressing beyond this engineered facade of blending the Jewish identity with Israel. Many anti-Zionists are being asked to disown and debase Hamas by these so-called ethical proponents of international rules-based order who happen to dominate Western rhetoric. While I categorically oppose the murder of any innocent civilians - Palestinian or Israeli - I reckon a quote by the renowned American President John F. Kennedy perfectly encapsulates my thoughts: “Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.”![]()

The writer is an independent political-economic analyst and can be reached at syzainabbasrizvi@gmail.com
US calls for safe resettlement of Afghan refugees
Collaboration between CxO Global Forum and Magnus Technologies
Bangladesh convicts 98 more opposition activists
Kabul to be Engaged Diplomatically
Nestlé Pakistan Wins Sustainability Awards
Ali Zafar wins big at DIAFA
Nepal riot police rout protesters seeking restoration of monarchy
NBP PRESIDENT ATTENDS UNIONPAY INTERNATIONAL MEETING
Pakistan applies for BRICS membership
COURT DIRECTS PIA, CAA TO SUBMIT REPORT
UNHCR raises alarm over Afghans’ exit order
HASINA’S DAUGHTER TAKES WHO TOP JOB, REJECTS CRITICISM
Concerns raised over ‘radicalisation’ of Afghan youth
‘ANIMAL’ TRAILER IS OUT
US seeks explanation from India over plot to assassinate Sikh leader
Pakistani teacher wins Global Teacher Prize 2023
NAPA holds an evening with Ustad Shafqat Salamat Ali Khan


Leave a Reply