The Soviet Roots of Modern Antisemitism: What Every Feminist Needs to Know
Izabella Tabarovsky unmasks the Soviet playbook hiding behind today’s so‑called “compassionate” anti‑Israel mobs, and the lessons we can take from the Soviet Jews who resisted.
In this episode of the Feminists Against Antisemitism podcast, Freya Papworth speaks with the writer and historian Izabella Tabarovsky to uncover the origins of the antisemitism erupting in feminist spaces.
In the West, most of us were taught to recognise antisemitism only in its Nazi, far‑right form but that narrow education has left many of us unable to spot the strain that came from the Soviet left, where Antizionism was engineered as a socially acceptable way to target Jews. Watch to understand how this blind spot enabled antisemitism to spread through activism, academia, and feminist circles, and why so many feminist spaces are now saturated with it.
This important conversation makes clear that what is often framed today as “progressive anti-Zionism” is neither new nor accidental, but something more precise and more dangerous: Antizionism, a dedicated antisemitic political project rooted in Soviet propaganda and designed to make hostility toward Jews appear moral and principled. We recognise these narratives for what they are, and we refuse to accept their laundering into our feminist spaces.
By tracing how Antizionism was engineered, absorbed, and reproduced, we can finally name the pressure placed on Jews to prove their moral worth through denunciation. The Refuseniks, and especially the women whose courage and organising exposed Soviet lies, show us what resistance looks like: refusing silence, refusing erasure, and refusing to bend to ideological demands. This understanding is why we are pushing back. It is why we insist on a feminism that does not sacrifice Jewish women, and why antisemitism, however repackaged, has no place in the movements we are building.
Izabella Tabarovsky has been named by Moment Magazine one of 50+ Jewish Innovators of the Past 50 Years. She has lectured at Yad Vashem, Georgetown University, the London School of Economics, George Washington University, the Parliament of Finland, and before a U.S. congressional briefing, among others.
She is a Senior Fellow with the Z3 Institute in Palo Alto and a Fellow with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, DC, the London Centre for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism, and the Comper Center for the Study of Antisemitism and Racism at the University of Haifa.
Show Notes
* Background (2:23): Isabella’s background and why she wrote “Be a Refusenik”
* Soviet Antisemitism and the Roots of Modern Antizionism (5:57)
* Post-Holocaust Soviet Jewish Experience (10:31)
* The Refusenik Movement (28:11): What is a Refusenik?;
* Parallels to Today’s Campus Antisemitism (33:42)
* Women in the Refusenik Movement (55:39)
* Feminism and Antisemitism (1:01:49)
* “As a Jew” Jews (1:08:25)
* Conclusion (1:17:11): The burning bush metaphor
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Feminists Against Antisemitism is building a community where women—Jewish and non‑Jewish—can speak openly, learn together, and push back against a tide of antisemitism that has gone unchallenged for far too long.If this resonates, please share the event, join our Substack, and stay with us for the next conversations.Follow us at:
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