The Metaphysical Root of Antisemitism and Ziophobia
From Supersession to Suppression: How Supersessionism Fuels the Hatred of Jews and Their State

Introduction
We often hear the claim, “I’m not antisemitic, I’m just anti-Zionist.” This distinction—routinely used as rhetorical cover—is crumbling. Today, hostility toward Jews increasingly expresses itself not through old slurs, but through obsessive opposition to their state. That’s why we need language that reflects this shift. Many who claim to oppose “just Israel” express a hostility so visceral and disproportionate that it demands its own name. That name is Ziophobia.
But Ziophobia isn’t just political—it’s metaphysical. It shares deep roots with antisemitism, especially in the theological narratives of Christianity and Islam, which historically sought to replace and erase Jewish identity. These supersessionist worldviews—sometimes inherited unconsciously—continue to shape modern perceptions of Jews and Israel alike. Even in secular forms, the old resentment lingers: Jews were supposed to disappear. Instead, they rebuilt their homeland.
This article traces the historical and spiritual logic behind that resentment. It examines how religious appropriation laid the groundwork for both antisemitism and its modern mutation, Ziophobia. It explores how institutions like UNRWA have weaponized identity and perpetuated grievance to wage a metaphysical war against Jewish sovereignty. And it investigates how names like Palestine and Israel became battlegrounds in the struggle over legitimacy, memory, and meaning.
This piece builds upon arguments developed in earlier essays, including Ziophobia and Antisemitism: Time to Draw the Line, The Battle for “Palestine”, and The Palestinian Identity Manifesto. Together, they form a broader effort to reclaim both truth and terminology in the struggle for historical clarity and rhetorical honesty.
Understanding Ziophobia requires more than tracking political bias. It requires confronting the deeper narratives that frame Jewish continuity as a problem to be solved. That confrontation begins here.
What Is Antisemitism?
Antisemitism is hostility, prejudice, or discrimination against Jews as individuals, a people, or a religion. It is one of the oldest and most persistent forms of hatred, taking different shapes across eras—from ancient scapegoating and medieval blood libels to modern racial theories and conspiracy myths.
It treats Jews as inherently suspect, powerful, or subversive. Sometimes it manifests as exclusion; other times, as persecution, violence, or extermination. It may no longer require belief in God—but it continues to echo theological patterns, rooted in the idea that Jewish difference is not just real, but intolerable.
Historically, antisemitism has been theological (e.g., deicide accusations), racial (e.g., Nazi ideology), economic (e.g., “Jewish control of banks”), and now political (e.g., denial of Jewish peoplehood or right to self-determination).
What Is Ziophobia?
Ziophobia is an extreme dislike or hatred of Israel and Zionism. It is not merely criticism of Israeli policy; it is an obsessive hostility to the idea of a Jewish state. Ziophobia is not the same as antisemitism, though the two often overlap—and even share the same metaphysical roots. In fact, Ziophobia is frequently a modern expression or mutation of antisemitism, repackaged to appear as political critique—which is why the distinction often confuses people.
Antisemitism targets Jews as individuals or as a people. Ziophobia targets Jews as a nation, through the delegitimization of their collective rights, most notably the right to self-determination in their ancestral homeland.
And while calling someone an "antisemite" often leads to indignant denials—"How dare you? I have Jewish friends, and plenty of Jews oppose the Zionist occupation too!"—calling someone a ziophobe forces a different kind of reckoning. They can’t easily deny their words and actions when they obsessively oppose only one country in the world—the state of Israel—simply for being Jewish.
Why Naming Matters
The key point is this: Ziophobia isn’t just a term to describe anti-Israel hostility—it’s a tool to expose it. It puts a mirror in front of those who claim to be "just critics" of Israel, revealing a deeper animus during the course of debate. That’s where its rhetorical power lies. Anti-Zionism lets people posture as principled dissidents; Ziophobia punctures that illusion and calls the hostility by its name.
Mapping the Moral Landscape
To understand the dynamics of Ziophobia and antisemitism, we can divide the global population into four rough categories, ordered by their size:
Neither Antisemitic Nor Ziophobic: This is the largest group, encompassing much of East Asia, Africa, and other regions with minimal historical involvement in Christian or Muslim replacement theology. Here, Jews are often viewed neutrally or even with curiosity, unburdened by centuries of inherited resentment. That said, prejudice can still arise indirectly in the increasingly global world, through imported narratives or political propaganda. Naturally, this group also includes those who affirm Jewish identity and sovereignty—such as most Jews and Zionists—who, by definition, are not hostile to themselves.
Both Antisemitic and Ziophobic: Predominantly Christian and Muslim societies, shaped by centuries of theological doctrines that first appropriated and then sought to invalidate Jewish identity. These groups historically claim inheritance of Jewish texts and covenant—yet are deeply unsettled by the continued existence and sovereignty of real Jews.
Ziophobic But Not Antisemitic: This includes segments of far-left Jewish intellectuals (like the so-called “New Historians”), ultra-Orthodox sects like Neturei Karta, and some non-Jewish liberal circles. They may not hate Jews per se but oppose Jewish sovereignty. Their opposition to Zionism often masquerades as moral purity while feeding into broader anti-Israel narratives.
Antisemitic But Not Ziophobic: The smallest group. For example, some evangelical Christians who support Israel as part of eschatological prophecy, yet harbor classic antisemitic tropes about Jews in other contexts. They may support the Jewish state while maintaining deeply problematic views about Jewish people.
Religious Appropriation and the Roots of Antisemitism
Christian and Muslim theology have long engaged in spiritual supersession—claiming that Jews were once chosen but are now obsolete. According to replacement theology, Jews broke their covenant and were replaced by the Church or the Ummah.
This theological narrative led to efforts not just to reject Judaism, but to possess it—while erasing those who live it. From medieval sermons to modern propaganda, energy has been spent proving that Christianity or Islam is superior because Judaism is supposedly obsolete, wrong or corrupted.
This appropriation is the metaphysical root of antisemitism: resentment toward those whose identity you’ve claimed, yet who stubbornly persist.
And when Jews regained sovereignty in 1948, that resentment deepened. For centuries, Jews were tolerated—when they were tolerated at all—as a reminder of divine punishment. That so-called 'tolerance' often took the form of second-class status, ghettoization, expulsions, pogroms, inquisitions, and ultimately, the Holocaust. But Jews who build, defend, and thrive? That challenges foundational theological and ideological assumptions.
Religious Appropriation and the Roots of Ziophobia
Just as antisemitism is rooted in the theological appropriation of Jewish identity, so too is Ziophobia fueled by the appropriation—and rejection—of Jewish peoplehood. Both Christianity and Islam have historically claimed to inherit the legacy of Israel. The Church called itself the “New Israel”; the Ummah positioned itself as the rightful spiritual heir to the Holy Land. These replacement narratives not only dismissed Jewish continuity—they sought to overwrite it.
But the existence of the modern state of Israel disrupts those narratives. It forces an uncomfortable confrontation: the Jews were not erased. They returned. They rebuilt. They survived both exile and extermination—and they did so in the very land that others claimed had passed to them. That reality is not just political—it is metaphysical. It creates existential dissonance for those whose doctrines, explicit or implicit, assumed Jewish disappearance.
Ziophobia, then, is not merely policy critique. It’s an allergic reaction to Jewish persistence and sovereignty. And just as theological antisemitism found ways to marginalize Jews in diaspora, modern Ziophobia finds ways to delegitimize Jews in their homeland.
Even Atheist Antisemitism and Ziophobia Have Theological Inertia
Some might ask: what about secular antisemites—say, Soviet-educated Russians or radicalized university students in the West who are hardly devout?
The answer is simple: prejudice has cultural memory. Just as atheists may still knock on wood or avoid black cats, secular societies often inherit religious biases long after they've lost belief. The USSR may have buried religion, but it kept the antisemitism. In the West, decades of Christian theological contempt simply morphed into secularized forms of anti-Israel ideology—Ziophobia by another name.
The forms change; the root persists. Even stripped of theology, the supersessionist impulse remains: Jews must not lead, must not thrive, must not return—and, to some, must not even exist. Whether in scripture or on campus, antisemitism and Ziophobia flow from the same ancient current: resentment toward Jewish continuity.
The Metaphysical Function of UNRWA
This same pattern of spiritual appropriation and attempted erasure lives on today—not only in rhetoric, but in institutions like UNRWA, where metaphysical war is waged under the guise of humanitarian concern.
Ziophobia isn’t just ideological—it has been institutionalized. Nowhere is this more evident than in the continued existence and function of UNRWA, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees. Unlike any other refugee agency in the world, UNRWA perpetuates—not resolves—refugee status. Its mandate applies uniquely to Arabs from the former British Mandate territory, who can pass their “refugee” identity down through generations, regardless of actual displacement.
This isn’t humanitarianism. It’s narrative warfare.
At the heart of this institutional framework lies a metaphysical goal: to preserve a grievance identity that undermines the legitimacy of Israel. UNRWA’s system reinforces the myth of an eternal victimhood—and crucially, it anchors that identity in a name: Palestine. The very name Jews used before 1948 was stolen, and then weaponized to craft a peoplehood in opposition to Israel.
But that new Arab identity was neither organic nor ancient. It was fabricated from the ashes of Jewish displacement and the ruins of imperial collapse. Before 1948, Palestinian largely referred to Jews. After 1948—and especially from the 1960s onward—it became a badge of opposition to Jewish sovereignty.
This is not mere semantics. It’s metaphysical inversion: erasing Jewish indigeneity while elevating a constructed identity aimed at negating Jewish statehood. UNRWA became the vehicle for this inversion—not by solving a refugee crisis, but by keeping it artificially alive.
Of course, they could manufacture another identity—they’ve done it before. Christian and Muslim doctrines claimed spiritual succession from the Israelites, declaring Jews nullified. Now, modern anti-Zionism has created a new Arab identity as heirs to a land whose Jewish story they attempt to erase. But the Jewish people, and their memory, persist.
And that is what UNRWA and its ideological allies cannot abide. The problem isn’t just that Israel exists—it’s that Jews continue to claim their name, their past, and their place. That metaphysical persistence is the ultimate defiance.
Humanitarian Facade, Political Purpose
Critics may argue that UNRWA is merely fulfilling its UN mandate and providing humanitarian aid. But intentions and effects are not the same. The agency’s unique definition of “refugee”—passed hereditarily and without resettlement—has no precedent in international law. It turns refugee status into a permanent political identity, not a temporary humanitarian category. This identity is then used not to seek resolution, but to preserve an open wound—a metaphysical grievance meant to delegitimize the Jewish return to sovereignty. The problem is not that UNRWA exists—it’s that it institutionalizes a narrative designed not to end displacement, but to perpetuate resentment.
Why “Palestine” Was Easy to Hijack
The religious and ideological matrix of belief and bias—rooted in supersessionist theology and reinforced by political propaganda—helps explain how entire narratives, and even national names, get redefined or stolen.
One reason the narrative of Ziophobia gained a particular cultural foothold is because the name Palestine was effectively abandoned by Jews after 1948. Before Israel's establishment, Palestinian referred largely to Jews—evident in institutions like the Palestine Post and the Palestine Philharmonic. But after statehood, the focus shifted to Israel, and the term Palestinian fell into disuse among Jews.
As history shows, anything abandoned can be stolen. Or at the very least, its meaning can be hijacked by others.
The Arab world and its sympathizers appropriated the term, repurposed it, and mythologized it into a modern national identity disconnected from its Jewish past. The vacuum left by Zionism’s forward-looking focus on building the state was filled with a narrative of victimhood, displacement, and denial.
Why “Israel” Was Not Easy to Hijack
If Palestine was easy to hijack because it was abandoned, Israel has proven far harder—because it never was.
Unlike “Palestine,” which faded from Jewish usage post-1948, the name Israel was never ceded. It remained central not only to Jewish history but to Jewish consciousness: in prayer, in liturgy, in identity. Jews never stopped calling themselves the People of Israel. Every synagogue, every Passover, every wedding, and every funeral invoked that name. Zionism didn’t invent it—it revived it in political form.
This is precisely why attempts to hijack Israel—by Christian and Muslim replacement theologies—have failed in full, even if they persist in rhetoric. Both Christianity and Islam claimed to replace Israel spiritually: the Church became the “New Israel,” the Ummah the rightful inheritor of the Holy Land. But these claims never fully erased Jewish continuity because Jews themselves never let go. They lived, remembered, and eventually returned.
That’s what makes “Israel” so hard to dislodge or redefine. It’s not just a label—it’s a living link to millennia of memory, language, covenant, and land. And it is precisely that unbroken connection that fuels resentment in those who sought to inherit what was never theirs to begin with.
Reclaiming Names, Reclaiming Reality
The name Palestine must be reclaimed—not invented, but restored to its historical connection to the Jewish people. Long before it became a banner for anti-Israel identity, it described Jewish institutions, communities, and aspirations under British rule. Reclaiming it doesn’t erase others—but it does correct the erasure of Jews from their own history.
Likewise, Ziophobia must become part of our vocabulary—not to replace the charge of antisemitism, but to supplement it, to expose the modern mutation that disguises itself as principled opposition to policy or concern for human rights. Naming this hatred matters—because denial of antisemitism is often cloaked in the rhetoric of anti-Zionism. Ziophobia gives that evasion a name.
Today’s ideological battlefield is as much about language as it is about land. Words shape perception. Narratives define legitimacy. When Jews relinquished the name Palestine, it was hijacked. When critics hide their hostility behind “anti-Zionism,” they count on ambiguity. Naming the erasure is the first step to restoring presence.
The line between antisemitism and anti-Zionism may have blurred—but Ziophobia makes it visible again. And once named, it can be challenged—not just rhetorically, but philosophically, politically, and morally.
Conclusion: The Endurance of Antisemitism and Ziophobia
Antisemitism and Ziophobia are not merely political phenomena or temporary social biases. They are deeply embedded in the theological and metaphysical frameworks of Christianity and Islam, which have historically claimed to replace or supersede Jewish identity. These religions’ foundational narratives involve both the appropriation and the delegitimization of Jewish history and sovereignty.
Because these belief systems continue to exist—as do the real Jewish people and the modern state of Israel—and, in many cases, remain unexamined or unrepentant in their supersessionist doctrines, antisemitism and its modern mutation, Ziophobia, are likely to persist for as long as Christianity and Islam endure.
This also explains why UNRWA and its system of hereditary “refugees” will likely persist as well. It is not merely a humanitarian agency—it is the institutional expression of an unresolved metaphysical resentment.
As long as Islam and Christianity continue to view themselves as rightful heirs to Israel—spiritually, historically, or territorially—without acknowledging that the Jewish people never relinquished their identity, sovereignty, or covenant, the conflict will remain unresolved not just politically, but ontologically.
And let’s be honest: supersessionism is just a theological euphemism for stolen identity, stolen covenants, stolen prophets, and ultimately, a stolen God. And whoever you’ve stolen from, you don’t want around. The continued existence of the Jewish people is an unbearable reminder of that theft—a living contradiction to the replacement story.
Understanding this is crucial: combating antisemitism and Ziophobia requires more than political or social measures. It demands confronting centuries-old theological narratives and the metaphysical resentments they perpetuate—along with the institutions, like UNRWA, that have grown out of them.

