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July 6, 2025

Depravity in Glastonbury

It all started with a music festival in southern Israel where peace-loving teenagers spent the night under the stars and awoke to barbarians wishing them their final good morning.

What occurred on October 7, 2023 was unimaginable: the slaughter, beheading, and gangraping of kids—some even younger than the concertgoers, who lived in neighboring villages and were similarly attacked, ransacked and set on fire.

Allow that to sink in for a moment. It bears mindboggling contemplation. This form of inhumanity is not easily absorbed.

Who would do such things? And who would learn of such things and feel nothing? Millions around the Western world were unable to summon the human impulses necessary to direct proper moral outrage at Gaza and sympathy for the nation it invaded so monstrously.

Nothing Israel had ever done could possibly justify such an otherworldly assault. Those claiming to be pro-Palestinian held signs suggesting that the massacre was “necessary resistance.” Really, beheadings and the gangraping of teenagers? These are “progressives”?

Soon thereafter, Israel’s justified retaliation was assiduously scrutinized and roundly condemned. Meanwhile, Hamas showed neither remorse nor any indication that they were finished with their attack upon the Jewish state.

In fact, despite Israel’s superior fighting force, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the vast majority of Gazans vowed repeat performances of October 7—“again and again.” They continued launching rockets at civilian population centers. Israeli and American hostages were held captive in underground terrorist lairs. Palestinian terrorists, often assisted by their own “civilians,” refused to release them.

All the while, antisemites in Western nations tore down posters intended to remind the world of those hostages. Their perilous situation did not matter. Returning them to safety was seen as superfluous. Given the world’s hatred of the Jewish state, they were paying the price for Israel’s very existence.

One would think that if there was any solidarity with the victims of the Nova Music Festival, it would come from college-aged students who also enjoy attending musical concerts. But the opposite proved to be true: the most ardent supporters of Hamas were found on college campuses, in the audience at concerts and performing on musical stages.

American teenagers were actually rooting for the terrorists who murdered and raped Israeli teenagers—not religious zealots or West Bank settlers, but people just like these teens! In a fatal musical twist, youthful Hamas and Hezbollah flag-bearers attend concerts to be serenaded by bands that have incorporated Jew-hatred into their set lists. It gives altogether new meaning to having a bullet attached to a band’s Billboard ranking.

In a fatal musical twist, youthful Hamas and Hezbollah flag-bearers attend concerts to be serenaded by bands that have incorporated Jew-hatred into their set lists. It gives altogether new meaning to having a bullet attached to a band’s Billboard ranking.

At this year’s Glastonbury Festival in the United Kingdom, which has hosted the biggest acts in contemporary music at their annual summer concert series since 1970, two bands played to the cheap seats where they found many antisemitic fans willing to sing along. Kneecap and Bob Vylan each treated audiences to pro-Hamas harmonies and anti-Israel incitement.

The British punk-rap duo, Bob Vylan, held microphones toward the audience to pump up the volume on, “Death, death to the IDF!” and “Free, free Palestine!” Palestinian flags were aplenty. One of the bandmates shouted, “Hell yeah, from the river to the sea. Palestine must be, will be inshallah, it will be free.”

About 20 minutes into the set of another band, Kneecap, an Irish rap group with an even more ignominious pro-Hamas history, one of its bandmembers interrupted the show to remind the audience of the band’s ravenous hatred of Jews.

“I don’t have to lecture you people,” he said to the assembled tens of thousands. “Israel are war criminals!”

This same rapper is already facing terrorism charges for holding a Hezbollah flag while onstage at a show in London. He topped off one of his songs with, “Up Hamas! Up Hezbollah!” Hezbollah is a banned terrorist organization in the United Kingdom. Displaying its symbols is a crime.

Kneecap performs at Glastonbury festival on June 28, 2025. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

In April at Coachella, the annual concert series in southern California, Kneecap showcased “F— Israel, free Palestine” on a big screen to thunderous applause. Supporting terror was suddenly part of their act. Everyone was now on notice what to expect onstage as a sidenote to the music.

The Board of Deputies of British Jews urged Glastonbury Festival organizers not to give Kneecap a platform to spread their odious messages. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer felt similarly that it was “not appropriate” for Kneecap to perform.

They were right, but the Glastonbury Festival refused to kneecap Kneecap. Its frontman instructed fans to mob the legal proceedings on the terrorism charge in London and “start a riot” outside the courthouse.

Palestinians always manage to attract such charming people to their cause.

These antisemitic antics at Coachella, London and Glastonbury came with consequences, however. Kneecap lost its United States booking agent. Visas for future entry into the United States have been revoked. The State Department advised, “The secretary of state has been clear – the U.S. will not approve visas for terrorist sympathizers.” Kneecap has a 21-day American tour scheduled for the fall. They will have to reapply for those visas. Such pleas from this Jew-hating band will probably — one hopes — fall on deaf ears.

Already, festivals and venues have scratched the band from their lineups. Bob Vylan’s American tour has been scrapped, too.

Undeterred, Kneecap released a statement proving that the fighting Irish nowadays only raise their fisticuffs for Israel.

“Since our statements at Coachella — exposing the ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people — we have faced a coordinated smear campaign. … They weaponize false accusations of antisemitism to distract, confuse, and provide cover for genocide.”

Meanwhile, the police have launched criminal investigations against both Bob Vylan and Kneecap for their Glastonbury “performances.” Campaign Against Antisemitism, a nonprofit, is accusing the Glastonbury organizers of breaching its license by knowingly allowing such inflammatory incitements on its stage.

The BBC, which aired the Glastonbury Festival live, issued a statement: “The BBC respects freedom of expression but stands firmly against incitement to violence. The antisemitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable.” Prime Minister Starmer called the words “appalling hate speech.”

One thing is for certain: Hamas supporters—whether in the United States or the United Kingdom, whether on college campuses or at large concert venues—believe that inciting hatred against Jews is a simple matter of free speech. Whether Jews should live or die is merely a matter of opinion, a point to be openly debated—whether on placards or through musical soundboards.

October 7 was the world’s first pogrom where music reverberated in the ears of its young victims. Israel’s very own “American Pie.” Today’s lyrics calling for the death of Jews will forever recall that fateful date when the music died.


Thane Rosenbaum is a novelist, essayist, law professor and Distinguished University Professor at Touro University, where he directs the Forum on Life, Culture & Society. He is the legal analyst for CBS News Radio. His most recent book is titled, “Beyond Proportionality: Israel’s Just War in Gaza.

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What’s Love Got to Do with It?

If fighting antisemitism were a bagel business, we’d be in Chapter 11.

It’s both simple and sad: The more money we spend fighting antisemitism, the worse things seem to get.

Despite hundreds of millions devoted to the fight in recent years, “the number of antisemitic incidents in the U.S. has surged almost 900% in 10 years, and last year reached its highest level recorded in nearly half a century,” according to an ADL survey released earlier this year.

Despite hundreds of millions devoted to the fight in recent years, “the number of antisemitic incidents in the U.S. has surged almost 900% in 10 years, and last year reached its highest level recorded in nearly half a century,” according to an ADL survey released earlier this year.

These numbers are alarming.

We’re alarmed when we hear about another despicable act of Jew-hatred, whether it’s the assault on Jews in front of a Pico synagogue or the burning of Jews at a peaceful rally in Colorado or the harassment of Jewish students on a college campus.

Those acts against Jews have nothing to do with what Jews do and everything to do with who they are. They’re Jews.

Let that sink in. All they did wrong was to be Jews.

The Jewish community has invested enormous resources over the years to build and nurture strong Jewish identities, and then, one day, that identity becomes a cause for being assaulted.

We teach Jews to be proud Jews while Jew-haters do the opposite. They want Jews to hide and fade away.

The question, then, is not whether we should be alarmed about the rise in Jew-hatred. Of course we should. The essential question is always the same: What should we do about it?

So far, we have fought Jew-hatred logically and directly: We expose it, we condemn it, we punish it, we correct lies, we go to court, we release statements, and so on. 

We make noise.

By all means, let’s continue that fight. Let’s continue to protect Jews against harassment and hate crimes, inflict consequences on Jew-haters and fight anti-Jewish discrimination in education, among other things.

But let’s also recognize the limitations of our loud war against Jew-hatred.

It’d be one thing if the Jew-hatred was declining, but if anything, it just seems to get worse. Sure, maybe without all this fighting things might have been even worse, even worse than antisemitic incidents surging more than “900% in 10 years,” as per the ADL survey. But is that really enough of a consolation? 

This is painful to admit, but all the noise surrounding Jew-hatred is conveying a perception that “America hates Jews.” In other words, the more we clamor about the rise of Jew-hatred, the more we may be unwittingly spreading the poison.

The hard reality of communication is that no matter how people hear about Jew-hatred, their takeaway is that people hate Jews. People who don’t know much about the subject might hear all this noise and wonder: Why do so many people hate Jews? Am I missing something? Should I hate them too?

The tragedy of people concluding that “America hates Jews” is not just that it could encourage new haters. That’s bad enough. The tragedy is how far it is from the truth.

Indeed, with all the alarming news about antisemitism, it’s easy to forget that Americans generally have a positive view of Jews. In a 2023 Pew survey, a higher percentage of Americans expressed very or somewhat favorable attitudes toward Jews than toward any other religious group.  

With all the alarming news about antisemitism, it’s easy to forget that Americans generally have a positive view of Jews. In a 2023 Pew survey, a higher percentage of Americans expressed very or somewhat favorable attitudes toward Jews than toward any other religious group.

That is remarkable.

Of course, you won’t hear any of this good news on social media or in fundraising pitches. Our fight against Jew-hatred, direct as it is, has by necessity associated Jews with the poison of hatred. Whether we’ve realized it or not, we’ve paid a price for that association.

Which brings us to a radical idea: What if we associated Jews with something more positive — like love?

On the surface that sounds absurd. How can we fight hate without ringing the bells about that hate? Without telling the world that this hate needs to stop?

What’s love got to do with it? Where is there room for love when all there is to call out and expose is hate and hate and more hate?

But that’s how communication works. People hear things and it enters their consciousness. In recent years, people have heard that more and more people hate Jews, which is another way of saying that Jews are worthy of being hated.

That’s where love comes in. Instead of associating Jews with the idea of being hated, it’s time we associate Jews with the idea of being loved.

What’s a good way to connect Jews with the idea of love? Start with the simple and powerful idea that Jews love America.

Think of it as a movement called “Jews Love America.”

At a time when more and more people are going in the other direction, we would show America why so many Jews love this country. Not a blind love that doesn’t recognize the country’s flaws, but a love of deep gratitude that has made us eager to give back in return.

Imagine a campaign on social media with hundreds of short video clips showing what Jews have given back to America and ending with “Jews Love America.”

Imagine a campaign on social media with hundreds of short video clips showing what Jews have given back to America and ending with “Jews Love America.”

Our love for America and our contributions to this country represent one of our most compelling assets against Jew-hatred. It’s time we use it.

I’m not naïve. It’s clear that the world’s oldest hatred is not going away. And it’s clear that it’s gotten worse in recent years, especially since Oct. 7 and the ensuing Gaza war.

So yes, groups fighting the scourge of Jew-hatred must continue their fight.

What I’m proposing is to add a new weapon to the fight. This new weapon is more indirect. It calls for injecting positive ideas about Jews into the atmosphere, to enter the notion in people’s consciousness that Jews are worthy of being loved. We’re more than people who are hated, who are afraid and who need protection.

“Jews love America” gives us back our mojo. It’s the ideal antidote to “America hates Jews.”

The ones who deserve to be hated are the haters, not those who are hated. A strong, Jewish, pro-American campaign will put some of those haters into Chapter 11.  

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