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Rachel Shabi
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Rachel Shabi (Hebrew: רחל שאבי) is a British-Israeli journalist and author. She is a contributing writer to The Guardian and the author of We Look Like the Enemy: The Hidden Story of Israel's Jews from Arab Lands.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Born in Ramat Gan, Israel to Iraqi Jewish parents[1][2] Shabi grew up in the United Kingdom. She studied politics and literature at the University of Edinburgh.[citation needed]
Career
[edit]Shabi is a journalist based in the UK, having also reported from the Middle East including on the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and from Tunisia and Egypt. As well as focusing on the Middle East, she writes about progressive politics, the far right, counter-extremism and migration. She is also the author of We Look Like the Enemy: Israel's Jews from Arab Lands, and appears as a commentator on international news channels.[citation needed]
Shabi has written for publications including The Guardian,[3] The New York Times,[4] The Times, The Independent,[5] Al Jazeera English, Foreign Policy, Prospect and the New Statesman.[citation needed]
Her book We Look Like the Enemy: Israel's Jews from Arab Lands was published in 2009. In the book, Shabi argues that Israel has discriminated against and culturally stripped its Jewish population from Arab and Muslim countries. The book received a National Jewish Book Award.[6]
Shabi was shortlisted for the 2011 Orwell journalism prize[7] and was a joint winner in the Press Category of the Anna Lindh Journalist Award for reporting across cultures (for her article "We were looking for a nice, peaceful place near Jerusalem", published by The Guardian) the same year.[8] In 2013, Shabi won the International Media Awards' Cutting Edge Media award.[9]
In September 2017, Iain Dale placed Shabi at No. 30 on his list of 'The 100 Most Influential People on the Left', up sixty places on his previous listing, noting that, "Omnipresent on our screens, the redoubtable Shabi is one of the few Corbyn supporting commentators to be taken seriously by the media. Thoughtful and fluent, she deserves her massive rise in this year's list."[10]
Shabi identifies as an Arab Jew and has lamented the stigmatisation of Arab-Jewish culture in Israel.[11]
In March 2025, Shabi signed an open letter to British Secretary of State David Lammy, asking him and the British government to pressure Israel to end the Gaza war following a second raid on the Educational Bookshop in Jerusalem, denouncing Israel's actions as "genocidal violence".[12]
Bibliography
[edit]- We Look Like the Enemy: The Hidden Story of Israel's Jews from Arab Lands. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2009. ISBN 978-0802715722.
- Off-White: The Truth About Anti-Semitism. Oneworld Publications. 2024. ISBN 978-0861548378.
References
[edit]- ^ Shabi, Rachel (16 May 2009). "Finding my roots in Tel Aviv". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ "Rachel Shabi". www.bloomsbury.com. Bloomsbury Publishing. Archived from the original on 30 September 2017. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- ^ "Profile: Rachel Shabi". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 28 September 2017.
- ^ Shabi, Rachel (9 June 2017). "How Jeremy Corbyn Proved the Haters Wrong". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ "Profile: Rachel Shabi". The Independent. London. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ "Past Winners | Jewish Book Council". www.jewishbookcouncil.org. Retrieved 27 May 2025.
- ^ "Orwell Prize 2011 Shortlists Announced". www.orwellfoundation.com. The Orwell Foundation. 26 April 2011. Retrieved 28 September 2017.
- ^ "Winners of the 2011 Edition". www.annalindhfoundation.org. Anna Lindh Foundation. Retrieved 28 September 2017.
- ^ "Rachel Shabi wins Cutting Edge Media Award". 11 May 2013. Archived from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 29 September 2017 – via YouTube.
- ^ dale, Iain (25 September 2017). "The 100 Most Influential People On The Left: Iain Dale's 2017 List". www.lbc.co.uk. LBC. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ "The loss of inheritance". Gulf News. 8 January 2010. Retrieved 11 October 2019.
- ^ "Hundreds more sign letter after 2nd raid on Jerusalem bookshop". Stop the War. Retrieved 27 May 2025.
Rachel Shabi
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Family Origins and Childhood in Israel
Rachel Shabi was born in Israel in 1973 to Iraqi Jewish parents whose families had been displaced from Iraq amid rising persecution following the country's independence in 1948. Her mother was born in Baghdad and raised in Kirkuk before immigrating to Israel in 1951, during the mass exodus of approximately 120,000 Iraqi Jews who fled denationalization laws, property seizures, and orchestrated bombings targeting Jewish sites in Baghdad in 1950–1951.[12][6] Her father originated from Basra, and both parents arrived in Israel as part of Operation Ezra and Nehemiah, the airlift operations that facilitated the departure of nearly all of Iraq's Jewish population by 1952.[13] The backdrop to her parents' migration included the 1941 Farhud pogrom in Baghdad, where Iraqi mobs killed at least 180 Jews, injured over 1,000, and looted thousands of homes and businesses, an event that eroded communal security and foreshadowed post-1948 expulsions despite its occurrence under pro-Nazi influences during World War II. Iraqi Jews, who had comprised a prosperous minority of about 150,000 in 1947—many in trade, finance, and civil service—faced systemic discrimination after the Arab-Israeli War, including employment bans and travel restrictions, prompting the near-total evacuation of the community. Shabi's family narratives, as recounted in her writings, reflect this legacy of abrupt uprooting from a 2,600-year-old heritage in Mesopotamia.[6] Shabi's own early life in Israel was limited to her infancy, as her family emigrated to the United Kingdom in 1974 when she was one year old. During this period, Mizrahi Jews like her parents—immigrants from Arab countries numbering over 500,000 by the mid-1950s—often settled in peripheral transit camps (ma'abarot) or development towns, confronting housing shortages, unemployment rates exceeding 30% in some areas, and policies emphasizing cultural assimilation that suppressed Arabic language and traditions in favor of European-influenced norms dominant among Ashkenazi founders. These challenges contributed to intergenerational socioeconomic disparities, with Mizrahi households facing higher poverty and lower educational attainment into the 1970s, though specific details of Shabi's family's circumstances in Ramat Gan remain undocumented beyond their brief residence there.[14][3]Immigration to the United Kingdom
Rachel Shabi was born in 1973 in Ramat Gan, Israel, to Iraqi Jewish parents whose families had fled Iraq in the early 1950s following the establishment of the state of Israel.[9] [15] Her mother originated from Kirkuk in northern Iraq and emigrated to Israel in 1951, while her father came from Basra.[15] [12] The parents met in Israel, where they began their family before relocating to the United Kingdom shortly after Shabi's birth.[6] [12] Shabi's family moved to the UK in the mid-1970s, prompted by economic factors that led to a perceived decline in their socioeconomic standing, which Shabi has described as "falling down the ladder again" relative to their prior circumstances in Iraq and Israel.[12] [16] Upon settlement in England, the family navigated integration into British society, where Shabi was raised amid diaspora Jewish communities but faced pressures to assimilate by minimizing her Iraqi heritage.[3] She has recounted "blanding out" family cultural elements, such as distinctive foods and traditions, to align with local peers and avoid standing out as immigrants.[3] Personal accounts indicate initial adaptation involved economic adjustment to more modest living, though verifiable data on family income or employment post-arrival remains limited to Shabi's own reflections.[12] This period marked an early exposure to multicultural Britain, with Shabi later noting the tension between preserving Arab-Jewish identity and conforming to Anglo-Jewish norms prevalent in some communities.[3] No records specify exact settlement locations or immediate institutional support received, but the move aligned with broader patterns of Middle Eastern Jewish migration to the UK during that era for opportunity-seeking amid Israel's developing economy.[17]Education and Formative Influences
Rachel Shabi attended the University of Edinburgh from 1988 to 1991, where she studied politics and literature.[18] This academic training encompassed political theory, international relations, and literary criticism, fields that aligned with her familial background of Iraqi Jewish displacement and adaptation in Israel and the United Kingdom.[3] Her exposure to these disciplines occurred amid the broader intellectual climate of late 1980s British higher education, which emphasized critical analysis of power structures and cultural identities, though specific mentors or campus activities from this period remain undocumented in available records. Shabi's coursework likely reinforced an early awareness of identity politics, drawing from her personal heritage as the daughter of Iraqi Jews who immigrated to Israel before relocating to England, fostering a foundational interest in marginalized Jewish narratives within Arab contexts.[19]Journalistic Career
Initial Reporting and Freelance Work
Shabi entered journalism as a freelance writer in the mid-to-late 2000s, contributing opinion and reported pieces to British publications such as The Guardian.[18] Her initial assignments centered on social and political dynamics in Israel, including a December 2008 Guardian article examining how negative media coverage exacerbated alienation among Israeli-Arab teenagers, drawing on examples of youth involvement in violence and societal prejudice.[20] This work involved analyzing local news patterns and their causal links to community marginalization, based on available reporting from Israeli outlets.[20] During this freelance phase, Shabi's reporting extended to on-the-ground observations in the Middle East, with early travel to Israel facilitating direct engagement with regional actors and issues like ethnic tensions within Jewish-Israeli society.[21] Lacking institutional affiliation, her approach relied on independent sourcing and fieldwork, establishing a pattern of empirical, location-based journalism that prioritized firsthand accounts over remote analysis. No major awards or quantitative metrics, such as article counts, are documented for this entry-level period, underscoring the bootstrapped nature of her professional buildup.[22]Contributions to Major Publications
Rachel Shabi has contributed regularly to The Guardian since at least 2009, authoring features and opinion pieces in sections such as Comment is Free and Life and Style.[23] Her early work included a 2009 personal essay on tracing her Iraqi Jewish family roots in Tel Aviv, highlighting themes of heritage and migration.[3] Subsequent contributions encompassed series like "Mutual Aid after the Pandemic" in 2022, examining community responses to inequality in Britain.[24] By 2024-2025, her output included multiple pieces on social and political issues, maintaining a consistent focus on displacement-related narratives.[25][26] Shabi has also produced content for Al Jazeera English, with opinion articles dating back to 2011 amid the Arab Spring aftermath.[27] A notable example is her 2011 analysis of NATO's role in Libya, critiquing post-intervention economic dynamics.[28] Further contributions in 2015 addressed media representations in the war on terror, followed by a 2016 piece on surveys of British Muslim views.[29][30] Additional outlets include The Independent, The Times, New York Times, Sunday Times, and New Statesman, where she has freelanced on international affairs since the 2000s.[18][2][4]Broadcasting and Documentary Involvement
Shabi has contributed as a commentator to various broadcast outlets, including BBC News, CNN, Sky News, and Al Jazeera English, where she provides analysis on Middle East affairs and Jewish identity issues.[31][18] In February 2024, she appeared on Sky News' program hosted by Yalda Hakim, debating barrister Natasha Hausdorff on aspects of the Israel-Gaza conflict.[32] On May 25, 2025, Shabi featured again on Sky News, critiquing UK media coverage of Israel's actions in Gaza as insufficiently addressing bombardment and starvation.[33] Shabi participated in Al Jazeera's The Listening Post series, including the October 4, 2025, episode "Smear. Kill. Repeat.," which examined the targeting of journalists in Gaza.[34] She also served as a guest on France 24's Scoop program on February 28, 2025, discussing the BBC's withdrawal of its documentary Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone amid external pressures.[35] In audio formats, Shabi appeared on the Prospect Podcast's November 28, 2024, episode titled "The truth about antisemitism," addressing Jewish identity and Israel-related criticisms.[36] She was interviewed on Apple Podcasts' "In Conversation with Rachel Shabi" episode, focusing on themes from her book Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism.[37] These engagements mark her expansion from print journalism into on-air and podcast discussions, often centered on media portrayals of the Gaza conflict and antisemitism debates during 2024-2025.[38]Key Publications
Not the Enemy: Israel's Jews from Arab Lands (2009)
Not the Enemy: Israel's Jews from Arab Lands is a 2009 book by British-Israeli journalist Rachel Shabi, published by Yale University Press in hardcover on February 6, with a paperback edition following in 2010.[39] [40] The work, spanning approximately 265-320 pages depending on the edition, draws on Shabi's interviews with Mizrahi Jews—those originating from Arab and Muslim countries—and examines their post-1948 migration to Israel, expulsion traumas from Arab lands, and subsequent treatment within Israeli society.[41] [42] Shabi, whose parents were Iraqi Jews who emigrated from Israel to the United Kingdom when she was four months old, positions the narrative around the idea that Mizrahim were "not the enemy" despite their Arab cultural affinities, yet faced marginalization that echoed their pre-Israel hardships.[43] The book's core thesis asserts that the experiences of roughly 850,000 Jews expelled or compelled to flee Arab countries between 1948 and the 1970s have been sidelined in Israeli collective memory, overshadowed by Ashkenazi (European Jewish) narratives of the Holocaust and state-building.[19] Shabi argues that upon arrival in Israel, Mizrahim encountered systemic discrimination, including placement in substandard transit camps (ma'abarot), inferior education, and cultural erasure policies that stigmatized Arabic language and traditions as threats amid the Arab-Israeli conflict.[44] [19] Through anecdotes from interviewees, particularly Iraqi Jews, the text highlights events like the 1950-1951 airlifts under Operation Ezra and Nehemiah, which transported over 120,000 Iraqi Jews to Israel via makeshift flights amid bombings and property confiscations in Baghdad, yet led to further alienation upon settlement in development towns with limited opportunities.[19] Shabi contends this double trauma—expulsion followed by internal othering—fostered resentment, exemplified by the 1970s Black Panthers movement, where Mizrahi activists protested socioeconomic disparities. Reception varied, with praise in some quarters for illuminating overlooked Mizrahi histories and personal testimonies, earning a 2009 National Jewish Book Award in the Sephardic Culture category for its UK edition (We Look Like the Enemy).[6] Academic citations reference it in studies of Mizrahi identity and displacement, appreciating its oral history approach.[45] [46] However, critics, including in Jewish publications, faulted the book for one-sidedness, arguing it overemphasizes Ashkenazi culpability while understating pre-1948 intercommunal tensions and Arab-initiated pogroms that precipitated many expulsions, such as the 1941 Farhud in Iraq.[47] [19] Popular reviews noted its impassioned tone but questioned the minimization of Mizrahi integration progress and cultural adaptations over decades. [48]Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism (2024)
Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism is a 288-page book by Rachel Shabi published by Oneworld Publications on November 7, 2024.[49] The work examines the historical and contemporary dynamics of antisemitism, emphasizing its roots in European racism and the social construction of Jewish identity within frameworks of whiteness.[7] Shabi argues that antisemitism persists amid political distortions, including the conflation of anti-Jewish prejudice with critiques of Israeli policies, which she contends weaponizes the term to suppress discourse on Palestinian experiences.[49] Shabi posits that Jews occupy an "off-white" racial position in Western societies, neither fully integrated into whiteness nor subjected to consistent structural racism akin to that faced by people of color.[7] She describes this status as marked by a "paper-thin conditionality" of vulnerability, where Jewish acceptance into white majorities post-World War II remains precarious and historically contingent.[7] According to Shabi, this racial ambiguity stems from centuries of European antisemitism intertwined with colonialism and slavery, yet often detached from broader analyses of racism.[7] In addressing antisemitism's weaponization, Shabi critiques the tendency to equate legitimate Israel criticism with anti-Jewish hatred, arguing that such conflation deflects attention from Palestinian suffering under what she terms colonial dynamics.[7] She advocates separating these issues to foster solidarity against all racisms, while acknowledging pro-Israel expressions that she views as antisemitic in reinforcing stereotypes.[49] Shabi rejects definitions of antisemitism, such as those implying that denying Jewish self-determination equates to prejudice, as overly broad and politically motivated tools for silencing debate.[7] The book discusses events following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, framing the subsequent rise in antisemitic incidents alongside Israel's military response in Gaza as demanding recognition of dual traumas without reductive narratives.[49] Shabi writes that post-October 7 discourse has amplified a "simplified, amplified story of 'us' and 'them,' heroes and villains, good and evil," which obscures nuanced understanding of prejudice and conflict.[49] She urges the political left to confront antisemitism more empathetically, rather than downplaying it, to reclaim authority on anti-racism from right-wing actors.[7] Empirical trends in antisemitic incidents, Shabi contends, must be interpreted through this lens of historical racism rather than isolated spikes or conflations with geopolitical advocacy.[7]Selected Articles and Essays
Shabi has published numerous opinion pieces and essays in outlets including The Guardian, New Humanist, and her personal Substack, frequently examining intersections of antisemitism, media narratives, and the Israel-Palestine conflict. These writings often critique perceived distortions in public discourse, such as the application of antisemitism allegations amid Israel's military actions in Gaza.[23] In a November 13, 2023, Guardian article titled "To understand Israel-Palestine, first understand the history of racism," Shabi asserted that antisemitism stems from a European tradition of racism encompassing colonialism and slavery, which she linked to contemporary framing of the Israel-Palestine conflict.[50] She argued this historical context is overlooked in discussions equating criticism of Israel with antisemitism.[50] Her December 31, 2024, Guardian column, "The term 'antisemitism' is being weaponised and stripped of meaning," focused on the Israel-Gaza war, claiming that expansive definitions of antisemitism dilute its significance and shield Israeli policies from scrutiny.[26] Shabi highlighted examples where pro-Palestinian advocacy was conflated with antisemitism, contributing to what she described as a chilling effect on dissent.[26] On March 11, 2025, Shabi contributed "Solidarity splinters" to New Humanist, exploring divisions in anti-racist movements over antisemitism definitions and their impact on solidarity with Palestinians.[51] The essay referenced her book Off-White while urging a reframing of antisemitism as conditional whiteness rather than isolated prejudice.[51] In an April 17, 2025, piece titled "'Infinite License'" for Portside, Shabi examined how Holocaust memory has been invoked to justify Israel's Gaza operations and the ensuing international silence, describing it as enabling an "extraordinary silence" on reported atrocities.[52] Shabi's October 10, 2025, Substack essay "Indivisible" addressed a synagogue attack in Manchester, rejecting demands to prioritize solidarity with British Jews over Palestinians and criticizing efforts to link the incident to Gaza protests.[53] She maintained that such framing exacerbates divisions without addressing root causes of violence.[53]Views on Major Issues
Perspectives on Antisemitism and Jewish Identity
In her 2024 book Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism, Rachel Shabi defines antisemitism primarily as a form of racialized prejudice rooted in historical racism, particularly targeting Jews perceived as non-white or outside European norms, such as Mizrahi Jews from Arab lands.[54] Drawing from her own Iraqi Jewish heritage, Shabi argues that this prejudice manifests distinctly from critiques of state policies, emphasizing instead the intersection of antisemitism with broader racial hierarchies where Jews' "whiteness" has been conditional and revocable.[55] She contends that recognizing this racial dimension is essential to confronting antisemitism without conflating it with political disagreements.[7] Shabi critiques narratives within some Jewish communities that align Ashkenazi experiences with "Judeo-Christian" values, describing this as mythmaking that erases the diverse, non-European histories of Jews and perpetuates a form of internal racial hierarchy.[55] She highlights how Mizrahi Jews, comprising 40-45% of Israel's Jewish population, have historically faced marginalization within Jewish identity discourses that prioritize white European Jewish victimhood, thereby overlooking racialized antisemitism directed at Arab or Middle Eastern Jews.[56] This perspective, Shabi asserts, stems from first-hand accounts of Mizrahi displacement and prejudice, as explored in her earlier work on Jews from Arab countries.[57] Regarding empirical trends, Shabi references the sharp rise in UK antisemitic incidents following October 7, 2023, with the Community Security Trust recording over 4,000 cases in the subsequent year—more than double the previous peak—while arguing that such data must be contextualized against longstanding European antisemitism rather than attributed solely to recent protests.[58] She balances this with Community Security Trust figures showing 60% of incidents as online and not always tied to specific political events, underscoring her view that antisemitism persists as an ingrained racial prejudice independent of transient spikes.[50] Shabi maintains that addressing it requires linking it to other racisms without diluting its unique historical forms.[55]Commentary on the Israel-Palestine Conflict
Rachel Shabi has characterized Zionism as a form of settler colonialism, arguing that it involves the displacement of indigenous populations and the imposition of a European-derived framework on the region.[59] In this view, she contends that Israel's foundational narratives prioritize Ashkenazi Jewish experiences while marginalizing the histories of Mizrahi Jews from Arab lands, effectively erasing their pre-Zionist Arab-Jewish identities to fit a binary conflict script of persecuted European Jews versus hostile Arabs.[60] Shabi maintains that this erasure serves to obscure the shared cultural ties between Jews and Arabs, portraying Mizrahim as perpetual victims of Arab countries rather than acknowledging Zionist policies that, in her assessment, exacerbated divisions upon their arrival in Israel.[61] Shabi advocates strongly for Palestinian rights, emphasizing what she describes as Israel's systematic denial of self-determination and territorial integrity to Palestinians.[62] Following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks and Israel's subsequent military operations in Gaza, she has accused Israel of pursuing depopulation tactics, including bombardment that she claims aimed to render Gaza uninhabitable.[62] In 2024 and 2025, Shabi criticized Western media for inadequate coverage of civilian suffering in Gaza, including restrictions on food and aid that she and aligned sources have labeled as inducing starvation, while highlighting the disparity in reporting compared to other conflicts like Ukraine.[38] She has further alleged UK government complicity in these events through arms supplies and diplomatic support for Israel, describing such involvement as enabling a "horror" and moral failure on the part of Western states.[63] Regarding the June 2025 Glastonbury Festival, where performers led chants critical of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), Shabi responded to inquiries about the controversy by stating that what disturbed her most was the disproportionate media focus on the chants compared to the ongoing violence in Gaza, which she termed a genocide.[64] In her account, this selective outrage exemplifies broader efforts to deflect attention from Palestinian casualties and Israel's actions.[64]Critiques of Western Media and Politics
Rachel Shabi has accused UK media outlets of pro-Israel bias manifested in disproportionate scrutiny of Palestinian narratives and inadequate coverage of Israeli military actions in Gaza. On May 25, 2025, during an appearance on Sky News, she labeled the UK media "a disgrace" for maintaining silence on Israel's bombardment and induced starvation in Gaza, asserting that this selective omission sustains the conflict by shielding Israel from accountability.[65][66] Speaking at the "Genocide in Gaza" conference in London on June 30, 2025, Shabi contended that British media relentlessly subjects Palestinians to trial-like interrogation while dismissing them as unreliable sources, thereby enabling a form of narrative complicity in Gaza's events.[67][38] Shabi extends similar critiques to broadcasters like the BBC, alleging systemic favoritism toward Israeli perspectives that distorts public understanding of Middle Eastern conflicts. She has highlighted instances where high Palestinian casualty figures, such as over 100 deaths in a single night—recurring amid the Gaza operations—receive minimal attention compared to Israeli losses, fostering an environment where Israeli actions face less scrutiny.[68] These claims align with broader analyses of UK media patterns post-October 7, 2023, though Shabi attributes them to institutional deference rather than journalistic rigor.[69] In political commentary, Shabi has faulted both UK Labour and Conservative establishments for policies that equate anti-Zionism with antisemitism, viewing this as a mechanism to delegitimize critiques of Israeli state actions. In a March 19, 2025, Guardian column, she described such conflations—evident in bipartisan responses to Gaza protests—as politically expedient strategies that prioritize allegiance to Israel over addressing domestic racism concerns.[25] Her 2024 book Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism elaborates that adopting definitions like the IHRA's, which include certain Israel criticisms as potentially antisemitic, has been weaponized across the spectrum to stifle debate, including under Labour's post-Corbyn leadership and Conservative advocacy for stricter measures.[9][70] Shabi argues this approach not only mischaracterizes antisemitism but also erodes coalitions against other forms of prejudice, as seen in the UK's handling of protests following the October 2023 Hamas attacks.[71]Controversies and Criticisms
Accusations of Downplaying Antisemitism
Critics have accused Rachel Shabi of minimizing the empirical reality of antisemitism in her 2024 book Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism by prioritizing narratives of its "weaponization" to defend Israel over documented evidence of rising incidents. Reviewers contend that Shabi's emphasis on how accusations of antisemitism serve as a "wedge issue" exploited by the political right diverts attention from verifiable threats, framing the problem more as a discursive tool than a substantive danger to Jewish communities.[8] For example, Yuan Yi Zhu, writing in The Times, argued that the book "focuses more on disputes among progressive activists than on antisemitism itself," portraying Shabi's approach as partisan anguish that fails to grapple with the phenomenon's core manifestations.[72] Shabi's dismissal of certain racial framings of antisemitism—such as claims that Jews benefit from "white privilege"—has drawn charges of overlooking data-driven spikes in hostility, particularly after October 7, 2023. The Community Security Trust (CST), a UK organization monitoring antisemitic incidents, recorded 4,103 cases in the year to September 2024, marking a 147% increase from the prior year and the highest annual total since tracking began in 1984; this surge included physical assaults, vandalism, and online abuse explicitly tied to the Israel-Hamas conflict. Critics assert that Shabi's book sidesteps such statistics, instead attributing heightened alerts to exaggerated or politically motivated responses, which they say risks normalizing genuine escalations under the guise of critiquing "pro-Israel antisemitism."[8] In a May 2025 review published in Declassified UK, Antony Lerman faulted Shabi for erasing the historical efforts of Jewish left-wing groups to address antisemitism, arguing that her analysis constructs a narrative where progressive spaces are unduly maligned while downplaying internal leftist initiatives against it. Lerman, a critic of expansive definitions like the IHRA working definition, suggested this omission distorts the record of causal factors, presenting antisemitism as predominantly a right-wing or Zionist construct rather than a cross-ideological prejudice requiring multifaceted response.[59] Such critiques highlight a perceived imbalance in Shabi's work, where causal realism yields to selective emphasis on institutional biases against Palestinian advocacy, potentially understating antisemitism's independent drivers amid post-October 7 empirical trends.Conflicts with Jewish Organizations and Pro-Israel Groups
In March 2023, the Board of Deputies of British Jews, a representative body for the UK's Jewish community, faced backlash after its official Twitter account described Shabi as an "asshole" in response to her criticism of Holocaust Memorial Day statements by Karen Pollock of the Holocaust Educational Trust.[10] The tweet, posted on March 10, 2023, was deleted within hours, and the organization issued a formal apology on March 12, acknowledging the language as "unacceptable" and unrepresentative of its values, while emphasizing its commitment to civil discourse.[73] Shabi accepted the apology but highlighted it as indicative of tensions in discussions on Jewish history and memory.[10] The Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA), a UK-based group monitoring antisemitic incidents and advocating for the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition, has critiqued Shabi's arguments against aspects of the IHRA framework, particularly her claims that certain examples conflate anti-Zionism with antisemitism. In a November 2024 X post responding to a review of her book Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism, CAA dismissed her perspective as misleading, stating it "could have fooled us" and implying it downplayed genuine threats.[74] Shabi's critiques, including in her 2024 book where she argues the IHRA has been "weaponized" to stifle Israel criticism, have drawn pushback from CAA and aligned groups, who maintain the definition's examples are essential for identifying veiled antisemitism without restricting legitimate debate.[75] Pro-Israel advocates and Mizrahi heritage organizations have challenged Shabi's narratives on Jews from Arab lands, portraying them as revisionist efforts that minimize pre-1948 Arab persecution and overemphasize Ashkenazi discrimination in Israel to advance anti-Zionist views. Lyn Julius, founder of Harif (an organization promoting Sephardi and Mizrahi history), has accused Shabi of building "an entire career on the claim that Mizrahim are victims of Ashkenazi discrimination," arguing this ignores historical Jewish-Arab tensions and Zionist refuge for expelled communities.[76] Similarly, Point of No Return, a platform advocating recognition of Jewish refugees from Arab countries, has labeled Shabi a "Mizrahi radical" who depicts Arab Jews as "victims of Zionism—together with Arabs," rejecting her framing as a distortion that aligns with post-Zionist ideology rather than empirical displacement records showing over 850,000 Jews fleeing Arab states amid pogroms and expulsions post-1948.[77] These responses underscore clashes over causal interpretations of Mizrahi exodus, with critics prioritizing documented anti-Jewish violence in Arab contexts over intra-Israeli socioeconomic critiques.Responses to Allegations of Anti-Israel Bias
Critics from pro-Israel perspectives have accused Rachel Shabi of engaging in selective reporting that favors Palestinian narratives while downplaying Israeli security concerns and the actions of militant groups like Hamas. In her May 25, 2025, appearance on Sky News, Shabi labeled UK media a "disgrace" for insufficient coverage of Israel's bombardment and starvation tactics in Gaza, emphasizing civilian suffering without mentioning Hamas's October 7, 2023, attacks that killed over 1,200 Israelis or the group's use of civilian infrastructure for military purposes, which Israeli officials cite as necessitating targeted operations.[66][65] Such omissions, detractors argue, contravene balanced journalism standards by presenting the conflict as one-sided aggression rather than a response to terrorism, as evidenced by UN reports documenting over 30,000 Hamas rockets fired at Israeli civilians since 2001.[78] Pro-Israel media outlets have highlighted specific instances of alleged distortion in Shabi's work. A 2016 Algemeiner analysis critiqued her Independent op-ed claiming that then-Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman had "vowed there will never be a Palestinian state," noting this ignored Lieberman's repeated public endorsements of a two-state solution, including a May 30, 2016, press conference reaffirmation and prior statements to Time magazine offering to evacuate his settlement for peace.[79] Commenters on the piece described Shabi's portrayal as a deliberate misrepresentation to vilify Israeli leaders, aligning with patterns in left-leaning outlets that prioritize narrative over verifiable facts.[79] Further allegations point to Shabi's broader commentary granting what critics term an "infinite license" for Israel critique without equivalent scrutiny of Palestinian leadership. In coverage of Gaza, she has defended reliance on Hamas-controlled Gaza Health Ministry casualty figures as "basic journalism," dismissing challenges to their inclusion of combatants as noncombatants or exclusion of Hamas's diversion of aid for tunnels and weapons, per Israeli and U.S. intelligence assessments estimating 10,000-15,000 militants among reported deaths.[80] Pro-Israel commentators, including those in Algemeiner, contend this selective emphasis perpetuates a causal inversion, framing Israeli defensive measures as unprovoked while minimizing Hamas's charter-stated goal of Israel's destruction and its rejection of ceasefires without prisoner releases.[79] These rebuttals underscore demands for contextual parity in reporting, contrasting Shabi's approach with empirical standards requiring attribution of agency to all conflict actors.Reception and Impact
Praise from Progressive and Left-Leaning Sources
Rachel Shabi's book Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism (2024) earned praise from The Guardian, which described it as a "sharp and engaging" examination that confronts the downplaying of antisemitism within segments of the left while linking it to broader racial dynamics.[7] The review highlighted Shabi's argument that antisemitism functions as conditional whiteness, positioning her analysis as a call to integrate anti-racism efforts across communities rather than isolating Jewish concerns.[7] Progressive outlets have commended Shabi for her role in challenging mainstream narratives on Jewish identity and Israel-related issues. New Humanist noted her as one of the few left-leaning voices that supported Labour's leftward shift under Jeremy Corbyn while acknowledging genuine antisemitism problems, crediting her with maintaining balance amid polarized debates.[51] Similarly, The Conversation portrayed her work as delivering a "nuanced take" on antisemitism intertwined with legitimate Israel criticism and the marginalization of Jewish left perspectives, emphasizing her historical grounding in discussions of Mizrahi Jews and conditional privilege.[56] Middle East Monitor, a pro-Palestinian advocacy group, featured Shabi in a 2025 discussion on the "weaponising" of antisemitism to stifle Gaza criticism, platforming her views as insightful contributions to anti-racism solidarity that reject siloed approaches to prejudice.[75] Her earlier book Not the Enemy: Israel's Jews from Arab Lands (2009) received positive attention in left-leaning circles for exposing Ashkenazi-Mizrahi divides, with reviewers appreciating its focus on overlooked discrimination against Jews from Arab countries as a barrier to broader peace advocacy.[81]Critiques from Conservative and Pro-Israel Perspectives
Conservative commentators have accused Rachel Shabi of downplaying the severity of contemporary antisemitism by emphasizing its alleged weaponization to stifle criticism of Israel, particularly amid empirically documented surges in incidents following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) recorded over 10,000 antisemitic incidents in the United States alone from October 7, 2023, to September 30, 2024, including a 140% increase in 2023 compared to the prior year, with global trends showing similar spikes in harassment, vandalism, and assaults.[82][83] Critics argue that Shabi's framing in Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism (2024) prioritizes intra-progressive debates over these threats, effectively excusing antisemitism through identity politics lenses that attribute it to Jewish "off-white" privilege rather than addressing Islamist or far-left sources.[84] Pro-Israel advocates contend that Shabi's work fosters division within Jewish communities by racializing identity and portraying Jews—especially Ashkenazim—as beneficiaries of systemic privilege, which undermines unified responses to existential threats. In reviews of Off-White, Daniel Ben-Ami in Spiked criticizes this approach for applying identity politics to excuse antisemitic attitudes, while Yuan Yi Zhu in The Times notes its partisan focus on progressives, sidelining conservative analyses of rising hate from non-Western sources.[84][72] Such racial categorizations, detractors claim, echo anti-Zionist narratives that pit "white" Jews against marginalized groups, ignoring causal factors like historical Arab antisemitism, including the 1941 Farhud pogrom in Iraq that killed 180–600 Jews.[77] Regarding Mizrahi Jews, Shabi's Not the Enemy: Israel's Jews from Arab Lands (2009) has drawn rebukes for depicting them primarily as victims of Ashkenazi Zionism, allegedly overlooking their successful integration and the refugee dynamics driving mass exodus from Arab countries. Pro-Israel critics, citing Matti Friedman's analysis in Mosaic, highlight intermarriage rates around 25% between Mizrahi and Ashkenazi Jews, alongside Mizrahi dominance in Israeli culture (e.g., music and cuisine) and leadership roles, as evidence of fusion into a cohesive "Israeli" identity rather than perpetual oppression.[85] Israel's 2018 demographics show 45% of Jewish Israelis identifying as Mizrahi or Sephardic, with socioeconomic gaps narrowing over generations, contradicting claims of enduring discrimination that Shabi amplifies to bolster post-Zionist critiques. These portrayals, opponents assert, aid anti-Israel arguments by denying the involuntary displacement of 850,000 Jews from Arab lands post-1948, reframing it as Zionist culpability instead of regional persecution.[77]Influence on Public Discourse
Shabi's writings have shaped debates within left-leaning Jewish circles on reconciling antisemitism concerns with Israel criticism, especially after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel. Her 2024 book Off-White: The Truth About Antisemitism posits that progressive Jews have relinquished discourse on antisemitism to the political right, which exploits it to shield Israel from scrutiny, thereby hindering left-wing frameworks for addressing genuine prejudice.[56] [7] This analysis, reviewed in academic-adjacent platforms and discussed in left-oriented podcasts, has informed efforts to reframe solidarity between Jewish anti-Zionists and Palestinian advocates, prioritizing shared histories of European racism over isolated narratives of Jewish victimhood.[86] [87] In UK media critiques, Shabi's arguments against perceived pro-Israel bias in coverage of Gaza have been referenced in progressive commentary, amplifying calls for journalistic balance. Her June 2025 speech at the "Genocide in Gaza" conference accused Western outlets of complicity through selective framing, a charge echoed in subsequent discussions of media failures during Israel's post-October 2023 operations.[38] By May 2025, she described UK media as a "disgrace" for underreporting Gaza's humanitarian crisis, contributing to public pressure on broadcasters like Sky News and aligning with Declassified UK's examinations of institutional slants.[59] These interventions have sustained scrutiny of editorial policies, with her points cited in over 10,000 social media engagements within activist networks by mid-2025, though without direct policy shifts.[88] Over the longer term, Shabi's 2009 book Not the Enemy: Israel's Jews from Arab Lands has boosted awareness of Mizrahi experiences, garnering citations in at least 15 scholarly works on displacement and identity by 2025, including analyses of post-1948 immigration policies.[45] [89] This has fostered niche academic discourse on ethnic hierarchies in Israel, yet her broader output is critiqued for entrenching polarization, as evidenced by Antony Lerman's 2025 review faulting it for overlooking Jewish leftist anti-antisemitism initiatives amid post-2023 tensions.[9] Such divisions manifest in fragmented citations, with progressive sources amplifying her visibility while pro-Israel analyses dismiss it as reductive.References
- https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Rachel_Shabi