Print Friendly, PDF & Email

As the Biden administration resumes its efforts to persuade Iran to rejoin the 2015 nuclear deal, it is worth remembering the Iranian regime’s commitment to antisemitism.

The regime has tried to hide this commitment, claiming that its calls of “Death to Israel” don’t mean “Death to the Jews.”

“The disappearance of Israel does not mean the disappearance of the Jewish people, because we have nothing against [Jews],” said Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in 2019. “Wiping out Israel means that the Palestinian people, including Muslims, Christians and Jews, should be able to determine their fate and get rid of thugs such as [then-prime minister Benjamin] Netanyahu.”

The lady doth protest too much.

Anti-Zionism is antisemitism, and the Iranian regime’s singular focus on denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination in the Jewish homeland is Jew-hatred, plain and simple.

One of America’s most prominent universities shamefully regurgitated Khamenei’s talking point. “The theocratic [Iranian] regime is neither irrationally messianic nor antisemitic in its hard power calculations,” read a page on Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced and International Studies. It was deleted following condemnation on social media by many Iran observers, including this author.

Distorted images of the Iranian regime are by no means unique to the American academy. While the rest of Iran’s Jewish community stays below the radar, one young rabbi—Rabbi Yehuda Gerami—has taken to calling himself the “chief rabbi” of Iran and posting his activities on social media. Gerami, who was educated in the U.S. before returning to Iran, is infamous for condemning Israel and making a “condolence visit to the family of Qasem Soleimani,” following the Trump administration’s elimination of the terror mastermind, according to Ynet.

During his rather strange tour of the United States this month, Gerami claimed that the Jews in Iran are thriving. “Even if someone is caught with wine on the street, if he says that he is Jewish and shows his Jewish identity card, there are no problems,” he told Ami Magazine, seemingly with a straight face.

Click HERE to read more.

Ellie Cohanim

Please Share: