“For years I felt ashamed I wasn’t strong enough to stay in Israel. Oct 7 changed everything.” ✡︎ Thoughts & research (mostly in words) by @BenHopper 📸
Anti-Zionism is Antisemitism: To say Zionism has no connection to Judaism is not just profoundly racist and antisemitic, it’s also willfully ignorant and embarrassingly stupid.
Note: This is a text I wrote and published a year ago. Two years into this ongoing war, it seems people are still blinded by ridiculous, fabricated propaganda and blood libels.
For those who still think there are “Jews” and “Zionists” as two separate groups, I’m sharing this again, with some newly added context.
⚠️ It is a very long text (9,000+ words) that clarifies this issue in depth across historical, ideological, religious, cultural, and political dimensions. It’s intended for readers prepared to engage with the subject through genuine focus, thoughtful attention, and critical reflection. While it can be read in parts, it is designed as a comprehensive whole - covering the fundamental truths behind the lies, and offering more than enough to gain a clear, informed understanding of the topic.
✡︎ RACISM REBRANDED ✡︎
Anti-Zionism is Antisemitism. It is the new rebrand or variation of Jew-hatred, and it is the product of Soviet, Russian, and Islamist propaganda.
As I’ll explain in detail below, ALL Jews are Zionists. The BS about “most Jews are Zionists” or that “a small % aren’t” is invalid and redundant. The people who claim otherwise, or the Jews who claim themselves to be anti-Zionists, don't truly understand what Judaism is (could also be brainwashed) or, as I call them, "happen to be Jewish." Read on.
Zionism is the self-determination and statehood for the Jewish people in their ancestral homeland, the land of Israel.
Saying you’re an anti-Zionist is exactly like saying, “I don’t have a problem with English people, I just don’t believe England should exist.” Now apply that to your own country and people, see how that feels. Imagine someone saying that to you. That’s precisely how Jews feel when you say it to them. And it goes even deeper once you understand our historic and spiritual connection to this land.
Quoting from IHRA’s ‘Working definition of antisemitism’:
“Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavour.”
Quick side-note: I recently posted about how the KGB invented the modern “Palestinian” identity in the early 1960s, propping up Egyptian-born conman and terrorist Yasser Arafat as their puppet (yes—the same Arafat who stole billions from “his own people”). You can read more in my August 6, 2025 post, ‘The Nazi–Islamist–Soviet Axis: Forging the toxic narrative behind “Palestine”’
This Soviet campaign reached the global stage in 1975, when the Soviet bloc, backed by Arab regimes, pushed the UN General Assembly to pass Resolution 3379, declaring that “Zionism is a form of racism.” It was a propaganda victory, meant to delegitimise Jewish self-determination while cloaking antisemitism in the language of human rights. All because Israel sided with the US, the sworn enemy of the Soviet Union. The resolution remained in place for 17 years, only revoked in 1991 after the fall of the Soviet Union. But its impact lingers in the mainstreaming of anti-Zionist rhetoric to this day. In fact, what we’re seeing today is a resurrection of this very same campaign, only this time it has an Islamic push.
Many have forgotten recent history or chosen to ignore it. As the saying goes, those who forget their past have no future. We want a better future for all, which is why I stand here today: to remind you of the past, to challenge the lies, and to speak the truth with clarity.
…
✡︎ ZION ✡︎
To understand how integral the term ‘Zion’ is to Judaism, you need to understand the fundamentals of our identity; The Jews or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group and nation originating from the ancient Israelites. Judaism is not just a religion. It is an identity, ethnicity, nationalism, culture, way of life, community, set of values, philosophy, mysticism, wisdom tradition, heritage, customs, holidays, beliefs and vision. All of those are closely related and integral to each other. They are all intertwined and inseparable from Jerusalem and Israel. It doesn’t matter how religious or non-religious you are (like me, a secular Jew).
The Jewish story begins with Abraham, who lived in the Land of Israel around 4,000 years ago, making the Jewish people the original natives of this land, a status recognised under international law as the indigenous people of their ancestral homeland. His son Isaac and grandson Jacob were also born and lived in Israel. After both Abraham and Isaac had passed away, Jacob and his family moved to Egypt to escape famine. Over time, his descendants became enslaved, yet they multiplied and developed into a larger, distinct people, remaining in Egypt for roughly 200 years according to rabbinic tradition, or up to 430 years according to a literal reading of the Torah, before returning to reclaim their ancestral homeland.
The evidence is not only biblical, it is archaeological. Discoveries include Egyptian inscriptions identifying the Israelites as “Shasu” nomads, naming the tribe of Reuben, and the Soleb inscription carved under Pharaoh Amenhotep III in an Egyptian temple in northern Sudan near the border with southern Egypt (c. 1400 BCE, 3,425 years ago). This inscription mentions “the land of the Shasu of Yahweh,” attesting to the worship of Yahweh (Jehovah, the Hebrew God) among nomadic groups, confirming their presence in Egypt, and directly linking them to the early Israelites.
Recent research also suggests that the Exodus occurred around 1475 BCE (~3,500 years ago), during the 18th Dynasty.
After leaving Egypt, the Israelites returned to their ancestral homeland, where King David established Jerusalem as the capital and Solomon built the First Temple nearly 3,000 years ago. Archaeological discoveries—such as the Merneptah Stele (c. 1208 BCE), the oldest non-biblical mention of “Israel,” and dwellings in Egypt resembling Israelite four-room houses, confirm both ancient presence and Exodus-related memory. These findings push the archaeological record of Israelite presence back over 3,200 years.
These archaeological finds confirm the continuous Jewish presence in the Land of Israel; even after exile, Jews never ceased praying toward Jerusalem. This enduring connection is further reinforced by countless artefacts, inscriptions, and traditions—from Israel and across the diaspora—that honour the names Israel, Zion, and Jerusalem across millennia.
Complementing this cultural and historical record, genetic studies also demonstrate that Jewish populations have deep ancestral roots in the Land of Israel, providing clear evidence of an unbroken presence for thousands of years and affirming the Jews as the indigenous people of their historic homeland.
Even in secular terms, this link is undeniable: before any misinformed and misunderstood arguments about “God promised his chosen people this land” or the whole tired “religious supremacy BS” take, there is a simple reality — the Jews are the original natives of this land, with a continuous bond of care grounded in history, archaeology, and cultural memory. Jewish identity has never been a claim to dominance but a burden of responsibility — to preserve tradition, pursue justice, and improve the world — without missionary ambition or the drive to universalise, unlike Christianity or Islam.
Jerusalem and Israel, both ancient and eternal, remain the heart of this people and the centre of their enduring connection to their land.
Which brings me to the simple foundation of this whole text:
There is NO Judaism or Jews without Jerusalem and Israel.
It just doesn’t exist.
If a Jewish person tells you they’re an “anti-Zionist Jew”, they don’t know what they’re talking about. It’s an oxymoron.
You simply CANNOT be Jewish and anti-Zionist at the same time. It’s logically impossible.
The word “Zion” (Hebrew: צִיּוֹן – Tzion) is used today as another name for Jerusalem, just as it was in biblical times, when it became one of the most famous names for the ancestral capital of the land of Israel and the homeland of the Jewish people.
Jerusalem was established as the capital of Israel about 3,000 years ago by King David, and it has remained at the centre of Jewish life, prayer, and identity ever since, whether Jews are religious or secular.
Jews are indigenous to Israel, and Jerusalem is inseparable from Jews, whether they’re religious or secular.
Both Israel and Jerusalem (Zion ציון), the ancestral Jewish capital, are mentioned plenty of times in the Bible, but also in the New Testament and the Quran in relation to the Jews (more below).
Originally, “Zion” referred to the ancient fortress in the City of David, which King David captured from the Jebusites and made his capital (~3,000 years ago):
“Nevertheless, David captured the fortress of Zion, which is the City of David” (2 Samuel 5:7).
וַיִּלְכֹּד דָּוִד אֶת מְצֻדַת צִיּוֹן, הִיא עִיר דָּוִד (שמואל ב, פרק ה, פסוק ז)
Over time, “Zion” came to mean the Temple Mount, and later became a poetic name for all of Jerusalem and, symbolically, the entire Land of Israel (~2,900 years ago):
“For the Lord has chosen Zion; He has desired it for His dwelling place” (Psalm 132:13).
כִּי בָחַר ה' בְּצִיּוֹן, אִוָּהּ לְמוֹשָׁב לוֹ (תהילים, פרק קל״ב, פסוק י״ג)
Interestingly, the Hebrew word “צִיּוֹן” (Zion) comes from the root צ־י־ן, meaning a marked or important place—a landmark or point of reference. While it originally referred to the fortress King David captured, over time it became synonymous with Jerusalem and the Land of Israel. In prayers and prophetic writings, “Zion” symbolises not just a physical location, but the spiritual and cultural centre of the Jewish people.
When we (Jews) marry, before the groom breaks the glass (a symbol to remember the destruction of the Jewish temples in Zion/Jerusalem, 586 BCE and 70 CE), he says the following prayer:
אִם אֶשְׁכָּחֵךְ יְרוּשָׁלִָם תִּשְׁכַּח יְמִינִי. תִּדְבַּק לְשׁוֹנִי לְחִכִּי אִם לֹ�� אֶזְכְּרֵכִי, אִם לֹא אַעֲלֶה אֶת יְרוּשָׁלִַם עַל רֹאשׁ שִׂמְחָתִי.
EN: "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning. Let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, if I remember thee not; If I set not Jerusalem above my chiefest joy."
This quote is from the Book of Psalms (137), from a psalm called "By the rivers of Babylon."
Sounds familiar? Yup, it's also the hit 70s song "Rivers of Babylon" by Boney M. (1978)
The words go as follows:
"By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, yeah, we wept when we remembered Zion"
This is also the first exact verse of Psalm 137, word for word.
...It's about how Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar II expelled most Jews from Judea to Babylon (586ish BCE), about 2,600 years ago.
In the film The Matrix, the word Zion suggests safety since the city became a religious haven for the Israelites after years of wandering and enduring torture. In the Matrix trilogy, Zion is still a promised land as well as a safe haven.
From the most superficial practices to the deepest layers of Jewish tradition, the connection to Israel, Zion, and Jerusalem is unmistakably central, reflected in daily prayers and festivals spanning thousands of years. Some of the most important prayers include Shema Yisrael – “Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One” (approx. 3,200 years old), the Amidah / Shemoneh Esrei – which includes “And to Jerusalem Your city may You return in mercy, and dwell therein as You have spoken” (approx. 2,000 years old), Psalm 137 – “If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her skill” (approx. 2,500 years old), Kaddish – “May He establish His kingdom… and bring His anointed one, speedily and soon, upon you and upon Israel” (approx. 1,900 years old), and Birkat Hamazon – “Rebuild Jerusalem, the holy city, speedily in our days” (approx. 2,000 years old).
Other notable mentions appear in prayers and blessings, such as “For out of Zion shall go forth the Torah, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem” (approx. 2,700 years old), “And a Redeemer shall come to Zion” (approx. 2,700 years old), and “May our eyes behold Your return to Zion in mercy” (approx. 2,000 years old).
Detailed - 21 Core Jewish Prayers and Biblical Verses Anchoring the Connection to Israel, Zion, and Jerusalem:
1. Shema Yisrael – (~3,200 years old)
English: Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One.
Hebrew: שְׁמַע יִשְׂרָאֵל, ה' אֱלֹהֵינוּ, ה' אֶחָד
Phonetic: Shema Yisrael, Adonai Eloheinu, Adonai Echad
Meaning: This is perhaps the most recognised declaration in Judaism and its central spiritual foundation – “Shema Yisrael, Adonai Eloheinu, Adonai Echad.” It is a biblical verse appearing in the Torah (Deuteronomy 6:4) and is far more than a simple verse; it is an eternal declaration of God’s unity, the foundation of Jewish faith and identity. “Shema Yisrael” serves as a statement of commitment to the one God, an enduring symbol of identification with the people of Israel and their divine destiny, and the most fundamental principle of Jewish belief – faith in monotheism. Almost every Jew, in every generation and location, knows its words; it is recited three times daily – in the morning, in the evening, and during the bedtime Shema – as well as on pivotal occasions throughout Jewish history and in individual lives, sometimes as a Jew’s final words in this world. It symbolises the spiritual continuity of the people of Israel, connecting prayer, identity, and history, and forms an inseparable part of Jewish spiritual life.
A chilling anecdote: On October 7, many civilians trapped in shelter rooms were terrified to open the doors, fearing the Hamas terrorists outside. To reassure them, IDF soldiers recited the Shema Yisrael in Hebrew, signalling that they were fellow Jewish Israelis, which allowed the civilians to recognise and trust them, opening the shelters and enabling their rescue.
2. Amidah / Shemoneh Esrei – (~2,000 years old)
English: And to Jerusalem, Your city, may You return in compassion, and dwell within it as You have spoken. May You rebuild it soon in our days as an everlasting structure, and may the throne of David (Your servant) be established within it speedily. Blessed are You, Lord, Builder of Jerusalem.
Hebrew: וְלִירוּשָׁלַיִם עִירֶךָ בְּרַחֲמִים תָּשׁוּב, וְתִשְׁכֹּן בְּתוֹכָהּ כַּאֲשֶׁר דִּבַּרְתָּ, וּבְנֵה אוֹתָהּ בְּקָרוֹב בְּיָמֵינוּ בִּנְיַּן עוֹלָם, וְכִסֵּא דָּוִד (עַבְדֶּךָ) מְהֵרָה לְתוֹכָהּ תָּכִין. בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה ה', בּוֹנֶה יְרוּשָׁלַיִם.
Phonetic: Ve-li’Yerushalayim ir’cha b’rachamim tashuv, ve-tishkon b’tochah ka’asher dibarta, u’vneh otah b’karov b’yameinu binyan olam, ve-chisei David (av’decha) meheirah le-tochah tachin. Baruch atah Adonai, boneh Yerushalayim.
Meaning: This is one of the central blessings of the Amidah prayer — recited three times daily — known as the “Blessing of Jerusalem” or “the Blessing for the Rebuilding of Jerusalem.” In this blessing, we beseech, through the grace of God, the return of the Divine Presence (Shekhinah) to the Holy City, the rebuilding of Jerusalem as a complete and eternal city, and the restoration of the kingship of the House of David to its rightful place. This prayer stands as a pillar of the Jewish people’s daily spiritual life and serves as a living, unceasing symbol of the hope for complete redemption and the renewal of national and spiritual life in the heart of the Land.
3. Psalm 137 – "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem" (~2,500 years old)
English: By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat and wept, remembering Zion. Upon the willows in its midst, we hung our harps. For there our captors asked of us songs, our oppressors demanded mirth: “Sing to us a song of Zion.” How can we sing the Lord’s song in a foreign land? If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, may my right hand forget its skill. May my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth if I do not remember you, if I do not set Jerusalem above my highest joy.
Hebrew: עַל נַהֲרוֹת בָּבֶל שָׁם יָשַׁבְנוּ גַּם בָּכִינוּ, בְּזָכְרֵנוּ אֶת צִיּוֹן. עַל עֲרָבִים בְּתוֹכָהּ תָּלִינוּ כִּנֹּרוֹתֵינוּ. כִּי שָׁם שְׁאֵלוּנוּ שׁוֹבֵינוּ דִּבְרֵי שִׁיר וְתוֹלָלֵינוּ שִׂמְחָה, שִׁירוּ לָנוּ מִשִּׁיר צִיּוֹן. אֵיךְ נָשִׁיר אֶת שִׁיר ה' עַל אַדְמַת נֵכָר. אִם אֶשְׁכָּחֵךְ יְרוּשָׁלִָם תִּשְׁכַּח יְמִינִי. תִּדְבַּק לְשׁוֹנִי לְחִכִּי אִם לֹא אֶזְכְּרֵכִי, אִם לֹא אַעֲלֶה אֶת יְרוּשָׁלִָם עַל רֹאשׁ שִׂמְחָתִי.
Phonetic: Al naharot Bavel sham yashavnu gam bakhinu, b’zochreinu et Tziyon. Al aravim b’tokhah talinu kinnoroteinu. Ki sham she’elu nu shovenu divrei shir v’tolaleinu simchah, shiru lanu mi-shir Tziyon. Eikh nashir et shir Adonai al admat nechar. Im eshkachech Yerushalayim tishkach yemini. Tidbak l’shoni l’chichi im lo ezkerchi, im lo a���aleh et Yerushalayim al rosh simchati.
Meaning: The oath "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem" is one of the most central and emblematic prayers expressing the eternal connection between the people of Israel and the Holy City. It originated during the Babylonian Exile, around 2,500 years ago, when portions of the Jewish population—particularly the political and religious elite, including priests, scholars, and leaders—were forcibly exiled from the Temple and from the Land of Israel to Babylon. The prayer expresses profound longing for Jerusalem and the Temple, a memory of exile, and a yearning for the return of the people and the rebuilding of the city. Recited at rivers of Babylon and on occasions such as before the Grace after Meals at weddings and other events, it underscores the spiritual and national attachment to Jerusalem in both joy and sorrow, becoming a symbol of an enduring bond, Jewish identity, and integral spiritual life.
4. Kaddish – (~1,900 years old)
English: He who makes peace in His heights, may He make peace upon us and upon all Israel. (And may He comfort us in Zion and rebuild Jerusalem in His mercy, in our lifetime and in our days, soon.) And let us say, Amen.
Hebrew excerpt: עוֹשֶׂה שָׁלוֹם בִּמְרוֹמָיו הוּא יַעֲשֶׂה שָׁלוֹם עָלֵינוּ וְעַל כָּל יִשְׂרָאֵל, (וִינַחֲמֵנוּ בְצִיּוֹן וְיִבְנֶה בְרַחֲמָיו אֶת יְרוּשָׁלָיִם, בְּחַיֵּינוּ וּבְיָמֵינוּ, בְּקָרוֹב), וְאִמְרוּ אָמֵן.
Phonetic: Oseh shalom bim’romav, Hu ya’aseh shalom aleinu v’al kol Yisrael, (v’yinachmenu b’Tziyon v’yivne b’rachamav et Yerushalayim, b’chayeinu u’v’yameinu, b’karov), v’imru Amen.
Meaning: The Kaddish prayer, particularly the verse “Oseh Shalom Bimromav” (“He who makes peace in His heights”), petitions for peace upon the people of Israel and underscores the sacred and eternal connection to Jerusalem. Recited in daily prayers, memorial services, and public ceremonies, it serves as a living reminder of Jewish identity and the historical and spiritual bond to the Holy City. The prayer functions as a pillar of spiritual continuity and the aspiration for peace, for both the individual and the nation.
5. Birkat Hamazon (Grace after Meals) – (~2,000 years old)
English excerpt: “…Have mercy, O Lord our God, upon Israel Your people, upon Jerusalem Your city, and upon Zion, the dwelling place of Your glory…”
Hebrew excerpt: רַחֵם ה' אֱלֹהֵינוּ עַל יִשְׂרָאֵל עַמֶּךָ, וְעַל יְרוּשָׁלַיִם עִירֶךָ, וְעַל צִיּוֹן מִשְׁכַּן כְּבוֹדֶךָ…
Phonetic: Rachem Adonai Eloheinu al Yisrael amcha, v’al Yerushalayim irecha, v’al Tziyon mishkan kevodecha…
Meaning: Even in daily routine, Jerusalem is remembered and its restoration is requested. Birkat Hamazon, recited after every meal that includes bread, invokes mercy for Israel, Jerusalem, and Zion, and prays for their rebuilding. This blessing connects ordinary life with the spiritual and national memory of the Jewish people, linking personal sustenance to the enduring hope for the land and city of Jerusalem.
6. “For out of Zion shall go forth the Torah” – Verse from Isaiah 2:3 (~2,700 years old)
English: For out of Zion shall go forth the Torah, and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.
Hebrew: כִּי מִצִּיּוֹן תֵּצֵא תּוֹרָה, וּדְבַר ה' מִירוּשָׁלָיִם
Phonetic: Ki mi-Tziyon tetze Torah, u-d’var Adonai mi-Yerushalayim…
Meaning: A central verse from the Hebrew Bible emphasises Jerusalem as the spiritual, cultural, and religious heart of the Jewish people. It presents Zion not only as a geographical landmark but also as a global spiritual centre, the source of Torah and divine instruction, and a cornerstone of Jewish identity. Recited in morning prayers, Shabbat, festivals, and moments of remembrance or mourning in exile, it reinforces the eternal bond between the people of Israel and the Holy City.
7. “And a Redeemer shall come to Zion” - (~2,700 years old)
English: And a Redeemer shall come to Zion.
Hebrew: וּבָא לְצִיּוֹן גּוֹאֵל
Phonetic: U’va le-Tziyon go’el
Meaning: This verse expresses the enduring hope for the coming of the Messiah and the ultimate redemption of Zion. It encapsulates the Jewish belief in God’s promise to restore Jerusalem and the nation, linking faith, history, and the anticipation of divine salvation. Recited in prayers, it reinforces the centrality of Zion in Jewish spiritual life.
8. “May our eyes behold Your return to Zion in mercy” - (~2,000 years old)
English: May our eyes behold Your return to Zion in mercy.
Hebrew: ותחזינה עינינו בשובך לציון ברחמים
Phonetic: V’tachazina einenu b’shuvcha le-Tziyon b’rachamim
Meaning: This phrase appears in prayers and liturgical poetry as a heartfelt plea for God’s compassion, expressing both spiritual and physical longing for Zion. It links personal devotion with national aspiration, reinforcing the presence of the Divine in Jerusalem and the enduring hope and commitment of the Jewish people to their ancestral homeland.
9. Baruch Atah HaShem Boneh Yerushalayim - (~2,000 years old)
English: Blessed are You, Lord, Builder of Jerusalem.
Hebrew: ברוך אתה ה' בונה ירושלים
Phonetic: Baruch Atah Adonai, Boneh Yerushalayim
Meaning: This blessing, part of the Amidah prayer, asks for the rebuilding of Jerusalem and the restoration of the Davidic monarchy. It expresses hope for the city’s spiritual and physical renewal and is recited three times daily. It symbolises continuity, redemption, and the eternal connection between Israel and Jerusalem.
10. Tekiah b’Shofar Gadol - (~2,000 years old)
English: Blow the great shofar for our freedom… and gather us together from the four corners of the earth to our land.
Hebrew: תקע בשופר גדול לחירותנו… וקבצנו יחד מארבע כנפות הארץ לארצנו
Phonetic: Teka b’shofar gadol l’chirutenu… v’kavtzenu yachad me-arba knafot ha’aretz l’artzenu
Meaning: The sounding of the shofar during holidays symbolises freedom, the ingathering of exiles, and redemption. It recalls biblical and historical calls for national unity and spiritual awakening, reinforcing the centrality of Jerusalem in Jewish thought.
11. “L’Shanah Haba’ah B’Yerushalayim HaB’Nuyah” - (~2,000 years old)
English: Next year in a rebuilt Jerusalem.
Hebrew: לשנה הבאה בירושלים הבנויה
Phonetic: L’shanah haba’ah b’Yerushalayim ha-b’Nuyah
Meaning: A Passover declaration expressing hope for the rebuilding of Jerusalem. It links the festival’s themes of freedom and redemption to the historical and spiritual longing for the city, and is recited at the Seder as a symbol of collective aspiration and faith.
12. Avinu Malkeinu – “Rise up, avenge the blood of Your servants” - (~1,500 years old)
English: Our Father, our King, rise up and avenge the blood of Your servants spilled.
Hebrew: אבינו מלכנו קום נקמת דם עבדיך השפוך
Phonetic: Avinu Malkeinu, kum nekamat dam avdecha hashfuch
Meaning: A supplicatory prayer seeking justice, divine protection, and national redemption. Traditionally recited on fast days, during penitential prayers, and on Yom Kippur, it expresses both personal and communal appeals to God while emphasising the historic suffering and enduring hope of Israel.
13. Vehavi’anu L’Shalom / Return in Peace - (~1,500 years old)
English: And bring us in peace from the four corners of the earth, and lead us upright to our land.
Hebrew: והביאנו לשלום מארבע כנפות הארץ ותוליכנו קוממיות לארצנו
Phonetic: Ve-havi’anu l’shalom me-arba knafot ha-aretz v’tolichenu kummiyot l’artzenu
Meaning: This prayer expresses the hope for a safe and complete return of the Jewish people to Israel. It connects exile, redemption, and Jerusalem as a spiritual centre and is recited in liturgy and pilgrimages, reflecting longing for national restoration.
14. Kinot / Mourning Lamentations - (~2,500 years old)
English: Recitations of lamentations over the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple.
Hebrew: קריאת קינות על חורבן ירושלים והמקדש
Phonetic: Kri’at Kinot al chorban Yerushalayim v’Hamikdash
Meaning: Kinot are recited primarily on Tisha B’Av and other fast days to mourn the loss of the Temple and the city. They reinforce memory, collective grief, and the hope for Jerusalem’s restoration, connecting historical suffering with spiritual resilience.
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Who are the “Palestinians” and why are they mistrusted and treated as second-class citizens across the Arab world?
Early Revolts & Civil Wars
The “Palestinian” Arabs have a long record of violence and destabilisation globally and across the Middle East. They directly incited two major civil wars: the Arab Revolt (1936–1939, against British and Jews, leading to the deaths of ~5,000 Palestinians, ~400 Jews, and ~200 Brits) and Jordan’s Black September (1970–1971, assassinating the PM and trying to overthrow the monarchy, leading to 3,000–10,000 deaths).
The Lebanon War
Their armed groups, particularly the ‘Palestine Liberation Organization’, played a major role in escalating the Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990), using Lebanon as a base for attacks on Israel and fueling sectarian conflict that claimed over 120,000 lives, including 2,000–3,500 in the mid-1980s alone.
The Israel Wars
In total, Palestinians were involved in 4 major wars against Israel: 1948 (Arab-Israeli War), 1967 (Six-Day War), 1973 (Yom Kippur War), and 1982 (Lebanon War). They also led two violent Intifadas (1987–1993, 2000–2005) and multiple Gaza conflicts: 2008–2009 (Operation Cast Lead), 2012 (Operation Pillar of Defense), 2014 (Operation Protective Edge), 2021 (Operation Guardian of the Walls), and the current ongoing war since Oct 7, 2023.
Global Terrorism
Since 1968, Palestinians have carried out an estimated 3,500 terror attacks, the vast majority in Israel but also in over 20 countries worldwide.
These included more than 24 airplane hijackings (dozens murdered, hundreds injured), 50 suicide bus bombings (about 300 murdered and 2,000+ injured), 20 café and restaurant bombings (about 150 murdered and 1,000+ injured), hundreds of shootings (thousands murdered and wounded), as well as rocket fire and stabbings (hundreds murdered and thousands injured). In total, these attacks have murdered an estimated 3750 people and wounded over 11,000. Many more were left traumatised.
Airport Security brought to you by Palestine
Palestinian airplane hijackings in the 1960s–70s were, in fact, one of the main reasons airport security became what it is today. Before then, security was almost nonexistent; passengers could simply walk onto planes with no screening. Their hijackings forced governments to impose metal detectors, baggage checks, and strict controls. The way every single person travels today has been fundamentally worsened as a result. All of it was boosted even further by 9/11.
Infamous Atrocities
Some of the most infamous atrocities include the Munich Olympics Massacre (1972, Germany, 11 Israeli athletes murdered), the Ma’alot School Massacre (1974, Israel, 25 hostages murdered—mostly children—and 68 wounded), the Coastal Road Massacre (1978, Israel, 38 civilians murdered and 71 wounded), the Achille Lauro hijacking (1985, Italy, 1 murdered, dozens traumatized), the Passover Massacre (2002, Israel, 30 murdered and 140 wounded), and most recently Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack (Israel, over 1,200 murdered, 5,000+ wounded, and hundreds taken hostage). Together, these acts caused thousands of civilian deaths and drew global condemnation.
Arab World Scapegoating
At the same time, Palestinians have been systematically scapegoated and mistreated by the Arab world, deliberately kept in suffering to preserve the so-called “Palestinian cause.”
In Jordan, many Palestinians live as second-class residents without full citizenship. They hold temporary documents, face higher fees for education, are excluded from many public-sector jobs, and are barred from professions that require citizenship (such as law or engineering). Thousands have also had their nationality revoked.
Oppression in Arab States
Many Palestinians remain stateless, politically marginalised, and trapped in poverty. Women face systemic oppression, schools are overcrowded, healthcare is underfunded, and the Hashemite monarchy (Jordan) deliberately keeps Palestinians weak to prevent them from challenging its rule. In Lebanon, Palestinians are denied land ownership, excluded from dozens of professions, and left dependent on underfunded UN camps. Across the Arab world, their suffering has been weaponised, with corrupt leaders ensuring the “cause” survives—even if it means crushing generations of their own people.
Displacements and the “Nakba” Lie
The Palestinians are experts at turning displacements into PR, particularly and almost exclusively when it involves Jews. Out of nearly ten displacements, the most famous one is the so-called “Nakba” of 1948, a self-inflicted tragedy later turned into a propaganda campaign against the Jewish people. Arab leaders rejected the UN partition plan, launched a war to destroy the newborn one-day-old State of Israel, and urged many Arabs to flee, while those who remained became citizens of Israel.
The displacement unfolded in the chaos of fighting that had already begun months earlier and escalated the day after independence, when five Arab armies (Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Iraq) invaded. Roughly 700,000 Arabs were uprooted, mainly through flight during the war, some expulsions, and direct calls by Arab leaders to leave. It was not caused by Israel’s existence, but by their own war of aggression.
Expulsions Across the Arab World
Over the following decades, Palestinians were expelled or displaced in nearly every Arab country where they settled: from Egypt (1950s), Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Libya (mid-1950s, thousands expelled), from Jordan after Black September (1970–1971, ~20,000), from Lebanon in 1982 (~214,000), from Kuwait in 1991 (~337,000), again from Iraq after 2003 (thousands), and from Libya in 1995 (~30,000) and 2011 (~13,000).
The Money & Death Loop
In total, Palestinians have endured about ten major expulsions in the past 75 years, almost all at the hands of fellow Arabs. Today, neither Egypt, Jordan, nor any other Arab country is willing to accept Gazan Palestinian refugees. Meanwhile, Arab leaders enriched themselves off their suffering, weaponised their victimhood, and exported violence across the region and the world. The West is helping to fund them with public money. And Jews in Israel and worldwide, as well as Palestinians themselves, continue to pay the price.
Recognising “Palestine” is legitimising Islamic conquest
“Palestine” is a symbol. It represents Arab imperialism, Islamic jihad, invasion, conquest and colonialism — rooted in antisemitism and hostility toward the West. For the interest of the Arab and Islamic world, perpetuating “Palestine” is essential to their ongoing holy war against Judaism. That's fundamental within the core of Islam. At the same time, it serves as a unifying moral cause and a very profitable business. Egyptian Arafat became the first Palestinian billionaire, Hamas leaders became multi-billionaires, and countless opportunists enriched themselves at the expense of suffering civilians.
The price of Extremism
The Palestinians are the most radicalised large group of Arabs in the history of Islam. They are presented as the Islamic world’s “victims,” a sacrificial offering that, for their twisted cause, must remain at all costs. Without this sacrifice, many political leaders, movements, and organisations would lose both power and profit. Their suffering is deliberately perpetuated to sustain this machine of control, terror, and financial gain.
No more Islamism
Many Arab nations learned their lessons long ago. Decades of terror made them see what the West still doesn’t. They understand the “Palestinian cause” for what it truly is: a multi-billion-dollar enterprise built on human sacrifice, antisemitism, and Islamic terrorism. Its number one weapon is inciting civil unrest from within societies through deceit. Its goal? Islamic conquest. Those “watermelon” flags flooding Western cities are a warning: civil strife is being stoked deliberately. Everything is unfolding according to plan.
Do not let it happen.
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Cover photo: Palestinian terrorists at the entrances to Amman, Jordan (1970)
Disclaimer: I’m a Jewish Israeli artist who believes in and wishes for peace and co-existence. I condemn all acts of violence and hate. This post is for educational purposes only and does not promote dangerous acts, extremist organisations, harassment, or bullying. All views expressed are personal opinions intended to raise awareness and encourage informed, respectful discussion.
Copyright Notice: This post may include copyrighted material used under fair use (Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107) for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education, and research.
I meant to post this yesterday, but I couldn’t engage; it was too intense. I had to step aside. By evening, I ended up collapsing into sleep, completely unable to cope with the day.
Today is Oct 7, 2025.
Two years on, we’re still mourning, still healing, still fighting on eight fronts, and 48 hostages remain in Gaza (around 20 believed alive).
Meanwhile, the foundations for a second Holocaust are being laid before your eyes, and many of you have taken part in it.
To all those virtue-signalling clowns, hypocrites, and useful idiots who used to be my friends �� who “morphed” into fully fledged, appalling Jew-haters — who lack even an ounce of real compassion: SHAME ON YOU!
I'll never forget. I'll never forgive.
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TRIGGER WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
Everything mentioned in this post is 100% factual.
I urge you to verify.
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October 7, 2023, was the deadliest, bloodiest single-day slaughter for Jews since the Holocaust.
Hamas and Palestinian Arab mobs from Gaza launched a meticulously planned assault, a barbaric invasion on southern Israel, murdering ~1,200 mostly civilians (nearly 80%), including 53 children under 18.
They stormed border towns, kibbutzim, homes, and the Nahal Oz military base, shooting toddlers in the head, burning families alive in safe rooms as they're screaming, suffocating, and executing Holocaust survivors with grenades, RPGs and beheadings.
Women were gang-raped, some found naked from the waist down with mutilated genitals, breasts severed, pelvis shattered from repeated brutal penetrations by multiple attackers, or bullet wounds to vaginas.
One woman’s body was found half-naked with semen stains and torn clothing, shot while fleeing. Necrophilia happened, too.
In kibbutzim like Re’im and Nir Oz, women were tied up, raped, impaled, or shot in the genitals, some burned after assault.
Forensic evidence, eyewitness accounts, and Hamas videos confirm 15 distinct cases of rape and extreme sexual torture across multiple sites. Victims were tortured, bound, burned, had their eyes gouged out, or their genitals slashed, including men, before being slaughtered in front of their families.
One grandmother was murdered on Facebook Live, using her own phone, while her family and friends watched in horror.
There are horrors I’m leaving out, too terrible to put into words and even harder to imagine, yet every one of them is real.
Over 250 people (90% civilians), including infants and the elderly, were kidnapped into Gaza’s tunnels, facing starvation and daily abuse, where female hostages faced systematic sexual assault, humiliation, and threats of rape or forced marriage.
Many were executed in captivity, including the Bibas family—Shiri Bibas (32) and her sons Ariel (4) and Kfir (9 months old). From the Nova party alone, 40 were kidnapped, and 14 are still held captive in Gaza.
Released hostages reported being stripped, groped, or forced to serve tea naked while terrorists mocked them; one woman was returned unable to walk after repeated assaults.
Hamas filmed and bragged about these acts, with intercepted audio capturing terrorists boasting of raping and slaughtering sobbing victims. This was not isolated sadism but an organised campaign of ideological sexual violence, torture, and massacre, designed to dehumanise and desecrate, leaving blood-soaked streets and shattered lives.
It was raw, sadistic savagery, a medieval pogrom amplified by AK-47s and RPGs.
In total, on Oct 7, 2023, ~1,200 Israelis and foreigners were killed, and ~5,430 were injured in the Hamas attack. Since then, ~840 more have died, mostly soldiers, totalling ~2,000 deaths since the war began. Around 25,000+ were injured, including physical and psychological injuries.
Approximately 250,000 are affected by or at risk of PTSD (7,000 soldiers, up to 500,000 civilians).
About ~55 soldiers and an additional ~20 civilians (or more) have committed suicide.
Since Oct 7, nearly 30,000 rockets, projectiles and drones were launched at Israel from Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Iraq and Iran.
About 200,000 civilians were evacuated from their homes: ~135,000 from the Gaza Envelope (~65,000 homes damaged) and ~65,000 from the north due to Hezbollah fire, with over 100,000 losing homes entirely.
I recently saw an Israeli write that we’re losing the propaganda war because we don’t lie.
While the Nazis hid their crimes, the Palestinians boasted about theirs, then blamed the victims for the very Nazi atrocities they proudly filmed themselves committing on their GoPros. That is the embodiment of pure evil.
Now, two years later, there’s been more than enough time to see the truth and choose a side.
Anyone still standing with “Palestine” is either a Nazi, or both a useful idiot and a Nazi. There’s no other option.
The antisemitic conspiracy theories, lies, and blood libels about Israel and the Jews, shared over the past two years, have recently escalated to levels so deranged they belong in a psychiatric textbook, not public discourse. What we’re witnessing is mass psychosis — pathological, delusional madness.
Indeed, it often feels like much of the world has become mentally ill.
And voilà, some still chose to protest Israel on this date.
The only Palestinians killed on that day were those who invaded Israel to murder civilians, rape women, burn families alive, and kidnap children—including a nine-month-old baby. Yet some “pro-Palestinian” groups prepare to honour them as martyrs. The intent is obviously clear: to justify violence and erase what really happened.
Those who celebrate it are sick, and those who exploit its horrors to spread hate are just as vile.
Protesting Israel on Oct 7 isn’t activism. It’s not empathy or compassion. It is antisemitism.
Oct 7 should be a day of grief, remembrance, and mourning —
a day to confront a catastrophe born of hate, misery, and horror.
Not a day to glorify it, not to deny it, and not to twist it into propaganda.
Those who do so become complicit in erasing truth and celebrating unspeakable evil.
Oct 7 is a day of mourning not only for Israel and the Jewish people, but for humanity itself.
Something broke that day — and the world has not healed since.
The wound has only deepened.
100 years ago, the Muslim Brotherhood was founded in collaboration with German Nazis. Let it be clear: what Israel is fighting today is Nazism on steroids — not less, but MORE.
The global “Palestine” movement is exactly that. And if people don’t wake up soon, they will one day see the horrors of Oct 7 visited upon their own families, children, and elderly. You’ve been warned by the caring, worrying and frightened victims for two years straight.
Earlier today, I saw my neighbour loading his car with his grandson, getting ready for a day at the beach. Life is strong. Life goes on. And we, Israelis, are tempered and resilient.
There is grace in that, too. It strengthens me. It reminds me of who I am. It fills me with pride in my Jewish and Israeli identity — a Jewish Israeli who sanctifies life over death, light over darkness.
It showed me my real friends — who truly love me, who will be there for me, who will protect me in a life-threatening situation, and who will wait and make sure to carry me home if, God forbid, anything happens to me on the way.
May the memory of those lost be a blessing.
May the hostages return home to their families and loved ones.
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Photo: Taken by me at a "junkyard-like" compound in southern Israel, just a few minutes from where the Oct 7 atrocities occurred.
A total of 1,600 vehicles of various types — from cars to scooters to trucks — were brought there. These include some burnt, bullet-sprayed vehicles, some struck by RPGs and others reduced to unrecognisable pieces of metal. Many served as death traps for their passengers, who were caught in Hamas ambushes at intersections while attempting to flee the massacre at the Nova party.
Of those, 300 are completely burnt-out cars, mostly belonging to victims of the Oct 7 Nova party.
This horrid place is anything but a "junkyard", it is a vast unsettling murder scene.
“May all our enemies and those who hate us be destroyed, and may all who seek to harm us quickly perish.”
I spent my first five months in London working as a security guard outside synagogues throughout the city. The news today filled me with a rage I could barely contain.
Those who dared to terrorise us on our holiest day, by sea (Hamas flotilla) or by land (Manchester synagogue / Germany, Hamas arrests), and those who helped with the marketing (the useful idiots Jew haters sharing Nazi-Greta selfie-boat propaganda, calling to globalise the intifada, or chanting to genocide Jews “from the river to the sea” for two years), know this simple, history-backed truth: Those who bless Israel will be blessed, and those who curse Israel will be cursed.
The photo reposted: Me standing outside the main London synagogue where I was stationed as a security guard. Taken on 8 December 2008, this image also serves as the profile picture for this project.
May the memory of those murdered in Manchester be a blessing 🕯️🕯️
Born in Israel.
Proud to speak Hebrew.
Proud of the IDF.
Proud to be Jewish.
Proud to be Israeli.
Those whose fragile minds were too weak to resist the blatant inversion of Islamic, Marxist and Nazi propaganda and conquest, who could not cope with even the most basic logic and common sense, are about to witness the next renaissance taking shape in the Holy Land.
Jewish values—freedom, critical thought, human dignity, and the pursuit of knowledge—built the foundations of the West. They honour life, empower women, and encourage debate and moral courage.
Islam, in contrast, suppresses freedom, oppresses women, punishes dissent, and chains generations to a mindset that stifles human potential. This is a clash not merely of armies, but of civilisations – of good vs. evil, life vs. death.
The war Israel is fighting today is not only for land, but for the soul of civilisation itself. It is freedom vs. slavery, light vs. darkness, truth vs. the death cult of tyranny.
History moves in rhythms. Golden Ages rise, flourish, and shift - Sumer, Egypt, Athens, Baghdad, Florence, New York, Silicon Valley. Each era lasts centuries, reshaping the world from its centre of gravity. Today, the Digital Age pulses at its peak, global yet searching for its next heart.
That heart will beat in Israel, a small land with enormous courage, ingenuity and vision. The Jewish people, indigenous to Israel, were exiled, enslaved and nearly destroyed, yet rose to decolonise and rebuild their sovereign homeland. Out of survival comes creativity; minds tempered by millennia of struggle are shaping the technologies of the future: AI, cybersecurity, biotech, space, energy, defence and agriculture. More than that, Israel will guide the moral compass of a civilisation built on freedom, justice, tolerance and peace.
A 3,000-year-old story is coming alive before our eyes. Prophecy beyond faith, now revealed as undeniable fact.
Those who see it, already live it. Those who refuse, stay blind — but soon it will be impossible to ignore.
From the root of what was once called the “Middle East” - Israel will rise as the true centre of the world, to shape a new Golden Era; the final one.
Am Israel Chai.
The liberal progressives got duped into hating Jews by those whose true aim is to dismantle liberal progress entirely.
The Jewish people are an indigenous people, rooted in their land for thousands of years, until European colonialists drove them out.
For two millennia, they were enslaved, humiliated, and ultimately subjected to genocide.
Yet these people rose, broke free from the chains of oppression, and by their own strength returned to their ancestral homeland to decolonise and rebuild a sovereign state.
This is the truth; those are facts.
This story is the very foundation of liberal progress.
The United Nations hates Jews (Since 1967)
The Lie of the UN:
The UN was founded in 1945 to prevent another Holocaust. Instead, it has become the greatest betrayer of that promise. An institution dominated by dictatorships now parades as “humanitarian” yet obsesses over condemning Israel more than all other countries combined. What does it say when the world’s only Jewish state is its perpetual scapegoat?
Corrupted by Tyrants:
Of 193 UN members, nearly 57% are authoritarian regimes. They dominate votes, silence democracies, and weaponise “human rights” against their enemies. How can China, Iran or Russia, all serial abusers of freedom, decide morality? The fox is not just guarding the henhouse, it is rewriting the rules. This is not justice. It is tyranny dressed as law.
The Obsession with Israel:
Between 2015 and 2023, Israel faced 154 UN resolutions condemning it. The rest of the world combined only 71. Since Oct 7, Israel around 40. The rest around 13. Syria gassed civilians, Iran executes women, China runs concentration camps. Yet Israel, the only Middle Eastern democracy, is hounded endlessly. This is not disproportion. It is obsession. It is institutionalised antisemitism.
Wolves in Charge of the Sheepfold:
North Korea chaired disarmament. Iran sat on women’s rights. Saudi Arabia leads the UN Commission on the Status of Women. China and Russia preside over human rights bodies. Murderers, torturers, oppressors—deciding who is moral. The very regimes committing atrocities now sit as judges. The UN has become a grotesque theatre of hypocrisy.
A Soviet Poison That Never Left:
In 1967 the UN was compromised by Soviet and Arab blocs, turning it into a weapon against Israel, and in 1975 they branded Zionism as “racism.” It was a propaganda weapon, not a principle. That lie still poisons the UN today. The world’s only Jewish homeland is demonised, while terrorism is repackaged as “resistance.” What began as Soviet strategy is now Islamist dogma recycled through the halls of the UN.
Abolish and Rebuild:
The UN in its current form is beyond repair. It is not a defender of human rights but a shield for tyrants, terrorists, and Jew-hatred. If the free world values truth, freedom, and justice, it must dismantle this broken institution and rebuild it from the ground up. Humanity deserves better. Israel deserves better.
The United Nations hates Jews (Since 1967)
The Lie of the UN:
The UN was founded in 1945 to prevent another Holocaust. Instead, it has become the greatest betrayer of that promise. An institution dominated by dictatorships now parades as “humanitarian” yet obsesses over condemning Israel more than all other countries combined. What does it say when the world’s only Jewish state is its perpetual scapegoat?
Corrupted by Tyrants:
Of 193 UN members, nearly 57% are authoritarian regimes. They dominate votes, silence democracies, and weaponise “human rights” against their enemies. How can China, Iran or Russia, all serial abusers of freedom, decide morality? The fox is not just guarding the henhouse, it is rewriting the rules. This is not justice. It is tyranny dressed as law.
The Obsession with Israel:
Between 2015 and 2023, Israel faced 154 UN resolutions condemning it. The rest of the world combined only 71. Since Oct 7, Israel around 40. The rest around 13. Syria gassed civilians, Iran executes women, China runs concentration camps. Yet Israel, the only Middle Eastern democracy, is hounded endlessly. This is not disproportion. It is obsession. It is institutionalised antisemitism.
Wolves in Charge of the Sheepfold:
North Korea chaired disarmament. Iran sat on women’s rights. Saudi Arabia leads the UN Commission on the Status of Women. China and Russia preside over human rights bodies. Murderers, torturers, oppressors—deciding who is moral. The very regimes committing atrocities now sit as judges. The UN has become a grotesque theatre of hypocrisy.
A Soviet Poison That Never Left:
In 1967 the UN was compromised by Soviet and Arab blocs, turning it into a weapon against Israel, and in 1975 they branded Zionism as “racism.” It was a propaganda weapon, not a principle. That lie still poisons the UN today. The world’s only Jewish homeland is demonised, while terrorism is repackaged as “resistance.” What began as Soviet strategy is now Islamist dogma recycled through the halls of the UN.
Abolish and Rebuild:
The UN in its current form is beyond repair. It is not a defender of human rights but a shield for tyrants, terrorists, and Jew-hatred. If the free world values truth, freedom, and justice, it must dismantle this broken institution and rebuild it from the ground up. Humanity deserves better. Israel deserves better.
The United Nations hates Jews (Since 1967)
The Lie of the UN:
The UN was founded in 1945 to prevent another Holocaust. Instead, it has become the greatest betrayer of that promise. An institution dominated by dictatorships now parades as “humanitarian” yet obsesses over condemning Israel more than all other countries combined. What does it say when the world’s only Jewish state is its perpetual scapegoat?
Corrupted by Tyrants:
Of 193 UN members, nearly 57% are authoritarian regimes. They dominate votes, silence democracies, and weaponise “human rights” against their enemies. How can China, Iran or Russia, all serial abusers of freedom, decide morality? The fox is not just guarding the henhouse, it is rewriting the rules. This is not justice. It is tyranny dressed as law.
The Obsession with Israel:
Between 2015 and 2023, Israel faced 154 UN resolutions condemning it. The rest of the world combined only 71. Since Oct 7, Israel around 40. The rest around 13. Syria gassed civilians, Iran executes women, China runs concentration camps. Yet Israel, the only Middle Eastern democracy, is hounded endlessly. This is not disproportion. It is obsession. It is institutionalised antisemitism.
Wolves in Charge of the Sheepfold:
North Korea chaired disarmament. Iran sat on women’s rights. Saudi Arabia leads the UN Commission on the Status of Women. China and Russia preside over human rights bodies. Murderers, torturers, oppressors—deciding who is moral. The very regimes committing atrocities now sit as judges. The UN has become a grotesque theatre of hypocrisy.
A Soviet Poison That Never Left:
In 1967 the UN was compromised by Soviet and Arab blocs, turning it into a weapon against Israel, and in 1975 they branded Zionism as “racism.” It was a propaganda weapon, not a principle. That lie still poisons the UN today. The world’s only Jewish homeland is demonised, while terrorism is repackaged as “resistance.” What began as Soviet strategy is now Islamist dogma recycled through the halls of the UN.
Abolish and Rebuild:
The UN in its current form is beyond repair. It is not a defender of human rights but a shield for tyrants, terrorists, and Jew-hatred. If the free world values truth, freedom, and justice, it must dismantle this broken institution and rebuild it from the ground up. Humanity deserves better. Israel deserves better.
The United Nations hates Jews (Since 1967)
The Lie of the UN:
The UN was founded in 1945 to prevent another Holocaust. Instead, it has become the greatest betrayer of that promise. An institution dominated by dictatorships now parades as “humanitarian” yet obsesses over condemning Israel more than all other countries combined. What does it say when the world’s only Jewish state is its perpetual scapegoat?
Corrupted by Tyrants:
Of 193 UN members, nearly 57% are authoritarian regimes. They dominate votes, silence democracies, and weaponise “human rights” against their enemies. How can China, Iran or Russia, all serial abusers of freedom, decide morality? The fox is not just guarding the henhouse, it is rewriting the rules. This is not justice. It is tyranny dressed as law.
The Obsession with Israel:
Between 2015 and 2023, Israel faced 154 UN resolutions condemning it. The rest of the world combined only 71. Since Oct 7, Israel around 40. The rest around 13. Syria gassed civilians, Iran executes women, China runs concentration camps. Yet Israel, the only Middle Eastern democracy, is hounded endlessly. This is not disproportion. It is obsession. It is institutionalised antisemitism.
Wolves in Charge of the Sheepfold:
North Korea chaired disarmament. Iran sat on women’s rights. Saudi Arabia leads the UN Commission on the Status of Women. China and Russia preside over human rights bodies. Murderers, torturers, oppressors—deciding who is moral. The very regimes committing atrocities now sit as judges. The UN has become a grotesque theatre of hypocrisy.
A Soviet Poison That Never Left:
In 1967 the UN was compromised by Soviet and Arab blocs, turning it into a weapon against Israel, and in 1975 they branded Zionism as “racism.” It was a propaganda weapon, not a principle. That lie still poisons the UN today. The world’s only Jewish homeland is demonised, while terrorism is repackaged as “resistance.” What began as Soviet strategy is now Islamist dogma recycled through the halls of the UN.
Abolish and Rebuild:
The UN in its current form is beyond repair. It is not a defender of human rights but a shield for tyrants, terrorists, and Jew-hatred. If the free world values truth, freedom, and justice, it must dismantle this broken institution and rebuild it from the ground up. Humanity deserves better. Israel deserves better.