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China's tightly controlled internet flooded with antisemitism following Hamas massacre
Antisemitic tropes are increasingly prevalent in both state-controlled media and online
By Eryk Michael Smith Fox NewsPublished January 28, 2024 7:00am EST
KAOHSIUNG, Taiwan — Speaking to the U.S. Bar Association last week, Aaron Keyak, the State Department's deputy special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, warned of the growth of antisemitism in China following Hamas' massacre of Israelis Oct. 7.
"There’s been an increase in the People’s Republic of China’s state media and online discourse of antisemitic tropes that Jews control the United States through deep U.S.-Israel ties, as well as control over banks, the media, and that they have influence over government leaders," Keyak said.
"Conjecture that Jews control the U.S. government and U.S. wealth is an antisemitic falsehood intended to degrade trust in the United States, our democratic institutions and, ultimately, democracy around the globe."
The statements from the administration will be welcomed by many who have been monitoring Chinese antisemitism, an already existing problem that has grown worse since the Hamas massacres Oct. 7 and the subsequent war in Gaza.
Most of the hatred expressed has been online. Reports show Chinese "netizens" openly mocking the parents of the half-Chinese, Israeli-born captive Noa Argamani, who was seen in a viral video looking terrified as she was kidnapped by Hamas. Argamani's Chinese-born mother has been targeted with strings of profanities after she asked Beijing to help secure her daughter's release.
Chinese web users frequently compare Israel’s actions in Gaza to the Holocaust, with Israel playing the role of the Nazis. YouTube is banned in China, but the most popular Chinese version of a video site, Bilibili, along with other social media platforms operated by TikTok owner ByteDance, including TouTiao and Xigua, is awash with pro-Hitler videos, memes, pro-Nazi content and antisemitic tropes.
The Times of Israel reported in late 2023 that Steven Spielberg’s "Schindler’s List," previously a hit in China, had been "review-bombed" down from 9.7 to a 4.3 rating. One highly-rated comment from a reviewer in China asked, "Where is the Palestinian Schindler?"
As Israel’s war against Hamas heated up in October, Chinese search giants Alibaba and Baidu, for a time, made Israel disappear. The Jewish state could no longer be found on either site’s map apps.
The chance that this removal of Israel "from the river to the sea" was due to a tech glitch is virtually zero. China's internet is the most policed on earth, and few observers believe this map incident was anything other than a childish gesture meant to bring a few moments of joy to pro-Hamas Chinese netizens.
Meron Medzini, professor emeritus at the Department of Asian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 91, has had a front-row seat to history, watching both the emergence of the State of Israel and the People’s Republic of China, a country he’s visited a dozen times.
Medzini told Fox News Digital that the "recent antisemitic publications and other forms of [antisemitic] expression in China should be seen as an expression of anti-Americanism. The belief is that Jews have vast influence on American politics, media, academia, banking and finance and, thus, in fact, control America. It is easier to attack Jews than America."
Medzini is the author of books on the history of Taiwan-Israel relations as well as Japan and the Jews during the Holocaust era.
Speaking to Fox News Digital from his office in Taipei, Ross Darrell Feingold, founding chairman of the Chabad Taipei Jewish Center in Taiwan and an analyst of Chinese foreign policy, explained that even if the CCP is not directly promoting antisemitic hate speech, up to now it has not required the platform operators to clamp down.
"On my Chinese social media account, the antisemitic vitriol directed at me is astounding," Feingold said. "It includes the usual stereotypes such as Jews control global wealth and U.S. foreign policy, to more extreme comments such as references to Jews going up in smoke or are better off being turned into soap".