By Seth Mandel
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
In the early 20th century, Jewish quotas at American
universities were seen by some as a way to deter anti-Semitism. Were
Jews to fill a disproportionate number of university spots, the idea went, they
would inspire resentment. Plus, the Jews of Eastern Europe were seen by gentile
elites as uncultured and unclean; surround your average student with enough of
these Jews, it was suggested, and that student can’t help but get sick of them.
I don’t know if anybody who espoused such theories really
believed them, but the crux of one of the most infamous periods of Western
anti-Semitism was justified by its practitioners as being for the Jews’ own
good.
A century later, here we go again.
Throughout the Western world, Jews are effectively being
banned from public spaces and told it is for their safety. Once again, citizens
of democracies apparently can’t be expected to control themselves at the sight
of groups of Jews. Order the Jews to stay home and—voila!—problem
solved.
The highest-profile example of this at the moment is the
European soccer league’s exclusion of Maccabi Tel Aviv fans from that team’s
upcoming game in Birmingham, England. But this has been building for some time,
and the trend that made this travesty inevitable has yet to be reckoned with.
More than a year ago, I wrote
about several examples of this “for their own good” anti-Semitism. We saw the
Israeli Olympic teams in Paris confined to their dorms out of concern over the
constant threats they faced. There was the ban of an Israeli ultimate frisbee
team from the European youth championships in Belgium; the International Ice
Hockey Federation’s exclusion of the Israeli team “until the safety and
well-being of all participants (including Israeli participants) can be
assured”; the removal of the Jewish captain of South Africa’s under-19 national
cricket team for the same reasons.
Yet now this trend has exploded.
Two weeks ago, a Brussels official announced that the
government was canceling a concert scheduled for October 15 by the popular rock
band Disturbed. “My priority and responsibility is the safety of residents,
demonstrators, spectators and the staff of Forest National,” the official said.
Disturbed frontman David Draiman is Jewish and has been an advocate for the
hostages and a prominent bane of anti-Semites in general.
Draiman has been made a particular target by Jew-baiters
in part because of Disturbed’s success. After two decades of recording and
touring, the band is still releasing chart-toppers
and selling out arenas despite all of the BDS movement’s efforts. The campaign
to convince venues to ban Disturbed because of the war in Gaza has clearly
failed, so the haters have turned to threats, which the local police then use
as an excuse to cancel the show.
That’s what happened in Birmingham, too. “As Israel
continues its assault on Gaza, killing thousands and devastating civilian
infrastructure, sporting fixtures involving Israeli teams cannot be separated
from the wider political context. Hosting such teams sends a message of
normalisation and indifference to mass atrocities,” wrote
infamous anti-Semitic former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and current MP for
Birmingham Ayoub Khan in September.
When that failed, and the game was to go on as planned,
Khan and his supporters pushed for Maccabi’s fans to be disallowed from
attending. The local police force was convinced that the overt threats of
violence being made against Maccabi fans—such as the one by a local Muslim
cleric—were legitimate and tried to wash their hands of the responsibility
to protect Jewish soccer fans.
As expected, the success of this tactic is breeding more
of it. A week after the announcement of the cancellation of Disturbed’s show in
Brussels, a Jewish film festival in Sweden announced
it would have to be postponed because no venue would host it. Why? You guessed
it: “Sweden’s largest cinema chain, Filmstaden, said in a statement that it had
decided against hosting the festival because of ‘safety concerns’ back in the
spring…. The theatre Folkets Hus, which sometimes hosts film screenings, also
declined on security grounds, according to Euronews,” reported the Telegraph.
One of the festival’s organizers posted that it would be
“outrageous if Sweden cannot protect cinema-goers who are interested in Jewish
film.” It is both outrageous and becoming par for the course.
To be clear, none of this makes Jews safer. Indeed, the
opposite: It is normalizing the idea that Jews cannot be protected at a soccer
match, at the theater, at a concert, and wherever else they might want to
gather. This, in turn, makes everyone less safe because it makes violence the
most effective tactic to determine which cultural events are allowed and which
are not. It’s an invitation to anarchy. As always, anti-Semitism is the gateway
drug to the complete collapse of societal norms.
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