Monday, November 3, 2025

The Clinging Evil of Antisemitism

By Kathryn Jean Lopez

Monday, November 03, 2025

 

If you’re walking in the Old City of Jerusalem at 4:00 a.m., you are likely a Christian, Jew, or Muslim on the way to prayer.

 

The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, built where we believe Christ was crucified, is one of the most beautiful churches in the world. There, a priest and friend celebrated Mass for another friend of mine, Andrew Breitbart, the morning after Andrew had died unexpectedly from a heart attack, in 2012. We prayed for his eternal soul and for the consolation of his family.

 

When Andrew died, I was on my first pilgrimage to the Holy Land. I had the opportunity to go again, not too long ago. I went to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at an early hour. I wasn’t going to; I was tempted to hit snooze. But I heard the Muslim call to prayer, and I was reminded that the most important thing we can do in our lives is to pray. It’s the best that we’ve got.

 

During that most recent trip, I was having some health issues, so during our tour of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, I found a spot to sit, right below where Christ had been crucified. This trip was sponsored by the Philos Project, which wanted to convey what was important about the land to people of various Abrahamic religions. Jonathan Silver, editor of the online magazine Mosaic, published by the Tikvah Fund, was with us. He found me at my spot and joined me. We are both New Yorkers. I run into him now and again in the Amtrak station named after Daniel Patrick Moynihan. (Moynihan, the Democratic senator who would be succeeded by Hillary Clinton, spoke out against partial-birth abortion, reminding us that we do not have to live in ideological silos.)

 

During our time under Calvary, I remembered a Good Friday past, in New York. That Palm Sunday, there had been an attack on a Coptic church in Egypt. In an act of prayerful solidarity, New York’s Cardinal Timothy Dolan went to a Coptic church in Manhattan with an ecumenical crowd. Rabbi Joseph Potasnick talked about how he was afraid to go outdoors on Good Friday when he was young, because it was believed that Christians would retaliate against Jews for the death of Jesus. But that’s the thing. Jewish men and women are not the enemy. Sin, instead, is in our own hearts. That’s why Christians are Christians. We are imperfect sinners in need of a savior. And antisemitism is evil.

 

We can’t tolerate those who excuse or deny the Holocaust. We often hear people talk about foreign policy in the Middle East with regard to Israel, but we should be able to recognize whenever such talk devolves to little more than an expression of hatred of Jews. We can have opinions about certain policy positions taken by State of Israel, but we must always stand with our Jewish brothers and sisters against hatred. Adopt love for others. It is what matters most.

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