Jews are the New Black
- Bruce News MA Ed.
- 2 days ago
- 6 min read

"And I will give to you, and to your offspring after you, the land of your sojourning’s, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession; and I will be their God." [1, 2]
Hebrew:
וְנָתַתִּ֣י לְךָ֗ וּלְזַרְעֲךָֽ אַחֲרֶ֗יךָ אֵ֣ת אֶ֤רֶץ מְגֻרֶ֙יךָ֙ אֵ֚ת כָּל־אֶ֣רֶץ כְּנַ֔עַן לַאֲחֻזַּ֖ת עוֹלָ֑ם וְהָיִ֥יתִי לָהֶ֖ם לֵֽאלֹהִֽים׃
Genesis 17:8 (From the Bible (Torah) Universally Authenticated World Wide (4000 Years Ago)
Bruce News MA Ed.
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Throughout the long, blood-stained chronicle of humanity, one terrible constant has endured: there is always a group singled out for hatred, scapegoated for the world’s sins, and persecuted simply for existing. Empires rise and fall, ideologies come and go, yet the pattern repeats with merciless regularity. One people is chosen to bear the weight of collective blame, to be stripped of dignity, safety, and belonging. Yesterday it was the enslaved Africans dragged across oceans in chains. Today, it is the Jewish people (multiple times in every generation).
In the United States, African Americans endured centuries of unimaginable cruelty. They were ripped from their homelands, sold on auction blocks like livestock, families shattered forever as parents and children were separated at the whim of slave owners. The lash, the branding iron, the rape, the back-breaking labor under the Southern sun — all justified by the lie that they were less than human. After the formal end of slavery, the nightmare evolved into Jim Crow: separate and unequal schools, water fountains, buses, and neighborhoods. Black citizens were denied the vote through poll taxes and literacy tests, terrorized by lynch mobs that strung bodies from trees while entire communities looked on or participated. The Ku Klux Klan burned crosses and murdered with impunity. Economic doors were slammed shut, generational wealth stolen, and basic humanity denied. This was not random cruelty — it was systemic, legal, and cultural oppression directed at an entire people because of the color of their skin.
The parallels to what Jewish people face today are chilling and unmistakable. Once again, a people is being targeted not for individual crimes but for their very identity. The Jewish people — who have survived exile, pogroms, and the industrialized slaughter of the Holocaust — are once more cast as the eternal enemy, the convenient scapegoat for every global frustration.
The situation for Jews right now is catastrophic. Antisemitism has not reached this level of intensity, boldness, and geographic spread since the dark prelude to World War II. What was once confined to the fringes exploded into mainstream discourse, street violence, campus intimidation, and institutional discrimination. Jews are being driven from their homes and communities in a modern form of exile — not always by official decree, but by the unmistakable message that they are no longer safe or welcome where they have lived for generations.
Consider Germany, a nation that should carry the permanent stain of the Holocaust as a warning to the world. In June 2026, a hotel in Bavaria explicitly rejected an Israeli Jewish family’s booking with the words: “Sorry, there are no Jews allowed in our hotel.” The message was sent through a major booking platform. This was not subtle code or dog-whistle — it was open, unapologetic antisemitism in the heart of Europe. While the hotel later apologized under pressure and faced investigation, the fact that such words could be uttered in 2026 reveals how far the rot has spread.
It is dangerous to be a Jew almost everywhere on Earth. In the Middle East, entire regimes and terrorist organizations openly preach Jewish extermination. In Iran, state media and leaders call for Israel’s destruction while funding proxies that target Jews and Israelis. In territories controlled by rejectionist groups, generations have been raised on textbooks and sermons that portray Jews as subhuman enemies deserving death.
Across Europe — in Paris, London, Berlin, Amsterdam, and beyond — Jewish families now weigh whether to wear a Star of David or a kippah in public. Synagogues require armed guards. Jewish schools are fortified. Assaults on visibly Jewish individuals have become routine. Protests frequently descend into chants calling for Jewish death or the erasure of the Jewish state.
In the United States, the land that once symbolized refuge, elite universities have become hostile territory. Jewish students have been harassed, blocked from classes, and subjected to encampments that glorify terrorists while demanding the exclusion of Jewish voices. Cities that once hosted thriving Jewish communities now see rising vandalism of synagogues, cemeteries, and businesses. Even in the New York City metropolitan area — long considered one of the safest and most vibrant centers of Jewish life in the diaspora — the warning signs are multiplying. Incidents are no longer rare anomalies. The danger is no longer distant; it is approaching the doorstep of every Jewish home, school, and synagogue. And it is coming precisely because they are Jews.
Why this sudden, ferocious resurgence? The reasons are as old as antisemitism itself and as fresh as today’s headlines: raw hatred, jealousy of Jewish resilience and disproportionate success in every field despite millennia of adversity, deliberate lies and propaganda that invert reality, and the age-old tactic of scapegoating Jews for every problem on Earth — wars, economic woes, pandemics, climate change. The ancient Christian blood libel — the false claim that Jews killed Jesus — has been revived in secular form, now weaponized through modern conspiracy theories that paint Jews as puppet masters controlling governments, media, and finance. Israel, the ancestral and legal homeland of the Jewish people, is singled out for demonization while far worse regimes escape scrutiny. The Jewish state’s right to exist and defend itself is denied in ways no other nation faces.
The places where this oppression festers with special venom include:
• Iran and its proxy network: A theocratic regime that embeds Holocaust denial and eliminationist antisemitism into its very constitution and foreign policy, exporting hatred through terror groups that target Jews globally.
• Much of the broader Middle East and North Africa: Where ancient Jewish communities were largely expelled after 1948, and where state media and education systems continue to demonize Jews as eternal enemies.
• Western Europe: Once a post-Holocaust refuge, now a landscape where Jewish life requires constant vigilance, with governments often slow or reluctant to confront the scale of street-level and institutional antisemitism.
• American academia and progressive institutions: Where ideological capture has allowed antisemitic rhetoric to masquerade as social justice, creating environments where Jewish students and faculty feel unsafe and unwelcome.
• Online and global digital spaces: Where conspiracy theories and calls for violence against Jews spread at lightning speed, normalizing what was once unspeakable.
This is not exaggeration. This is the reality for millions of Jews in 2026.
The Jewish people have always known that their survival depends on remembering history’s lessons. The world once said “never again” after the Holocaust. Yet here we are, watching the same poisonous patterns re-emerge with terrifying speed. The title “Jew is the New Black” is not mere provocation — it is a stark recognition that the machinery of bigotry has found its newest, most convenient target. Just as African Americans were dehumanized and oppressed for who they were, Jews today are being told, through words and deeds, that their very existence is the problem.
History does not repeat itself exactly, but it rhymes with deadly precision. The question is no longer whether antisemitism is rising — the data, the incidents, the fear in Jewish communities worldwide confirm it. The question is whether the world will finally recognize that the persecution of Jews has always been the leading indicator of civilization’s moral collapse. If we fail to confront this darkness now — with clarity, courage, and unity — the next chapter may be even darker than the last. The Jewish people have survived every attempt to erase them. The real test is whether humanity has finally learned that when Jews are targeted, it is never only Jews who are in danger. The canary is singing again. The question is whether anyone is still listening.
For the Jewish People we don’t want to believe the reality of this situation. Unfortunately the danger is here and soon it will be knocking on our door.
Again, we are facing the choice of Good and Evil. Choose Life. Unfortunately this is a time where Evil is winning.
Pray, Vote and Be Active --- Bruce
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Unfortunately True.