- Source: Zionist as a pejorative
Zionist as a pejorative or Zio ( ZY-oh) is a term commonly used by "anti-Zionists" as described by academics, political parties and civil rights organizations as antisemitic, including but not limited to the American Jewish Committee (AJC), Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the British Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats.
History of pejorative use
The use of the compounded "Zio" as a slur is first recorded by the 1990 edition of the American Jewish Yearbook as in the term "Zionazi", spraypainted as graffiti on the campus of SUNY-Binghamton. The website WikiZio, run by former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) David Duke uses "Zio" as a noun or as a hyphenated or unhyphenated adjective. Other variations of "Zio-" include "Zio-Communism", "Zio-economics", "Zio-supremacism", and "Zio-occupied America".
Ben Samuels, writing for Haaretz, has claimed that the term was popularized first by David Duke and then later by leftists and members of the British Labour Party. In 2016, the British Labour Party released an inquiry into antisemitism stating that "Epithets such as [...] 'Zio' and others should have no place in Labour party discourse going forward." Speaking at the inquiry's launch, party leader Jeremy Corbyn stated that "'Zio' is a vile epithet that follows in a long line of earlier such terms that have no place whatsoever in our party."
In 2017, the organizers of the Chicago Dyke March faced accusations of antisemitism after their Twitter account used the term "Zio tears". In April of the same year, Terry Couchman, an election candidate of the British Labour Party, was suspended over his use of "ZioNazi" in a post criticising Israel. Tony Greenstein, another then-member of the British Labour Party, was accused of antisemitism and expelled from the party in 2018 for using the term "Zios" among other allegations.
Reception
According to the American Jewish Committee (AJC), "Zio" is used by antisemites to pass off their antisemitism as "anti-Zionism", pointing out that "Zio" is an euphemism for "Jew". This view was shared by prominent Jewish civil rights advocacy Anti-Defamation League. Similarly, progressive journals like the Mosaic Magazine referred to "Zio" as a "new anti-Jewish slur". Writer Ariel Sobel of the Jewish Journal also pointed out that "Zio" was an antisemitic slur with roots within antisemitic right-wing extremist circles that had been adopted by some progressives in their activism. Well-known Czech-Israeli Jewish Holocaust historian Yehuda Bauer succinctly called the "Zio-Nazi" slur hate speech.
Zionist as pejorative
During the Israel-Hamas war, the term Zionist became a popular pejorative among the political left. For many Palestinians it is an "ugly" term, because, in their view, it implies the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight. In July 2024, Meta made the controversial decision to impose restrictions on the use of the term. This decision was welcomed by the American Jewish Committee., while 73 organizations sent a letter to the Meta, alleging that such a policy "will also encourage the incorrect and harmful conflation of criticism of the acts of the state of Israel with antisemitism." A pro-Palestinian digital rights group further argued that "Zionism is an ideology. It's not a race." David Duke, the former KKK's Grand Wizard, reportedly used it as a slur against Jews based on the fact that Zionism holds such widespread appeal among contemporary Jews that it has become a core part of many of their identity, especially in the US, where 85% American Jews believed in the importance of the US supporting Israel, and the UK, where 80% British Jews identified as Zionist.
See also
Anti-Zionism
New antisemitism
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Zionist as a pejorative
- Zionism
- First Zionist Congress
- World Zionist Congress
- 2024 pro-Palestinian protests on university campuses
- Legitimacy of the State of Israel
- Herzl's Mauschel and Zionist antisemitism
- Ze'ev Jabotinsky
- Yishuv
- Public diplomacy of Israel