THE HIDDEN MENTAL HEALTH TOLL OF ANTISEMETISM

How antisemitism Impacts Mental Health Around the World.

By Bev Moss-Reilly

A compassionate, human look at how antisemitism affects mental health worldwide, from fear and grief to trauma, silence, and the struggle to feel safe.

Antisemitism is often discussed in terms of politics, history, religion, conflict, and security. All of those matter. But there is another side to it that is far more personal and often far less visible. It is what antisemitism does to the mind, the body, the nervous system, and the heart.

For many Jewish people around the world, antisemitism is not only about shocking headlines or dramatic public incidents. It is also about what happens in quieter moments. It is the hesitation before walking into a public space wearing something that identifies you as Jewish. It is the quick glance over the shoulder after a hostile comment. It is the sinking feeling when social media fills with rage and blame and you know some of it is aimed not at a government or a policy, but at people like you. It is the exhaustion of having to explain, defend, justify, or prove your humanity repeatedly.

At a time when anti-Jewish incidents continue to be recorded across countries and continents, many Jewish families are carrying a level of fear that is hard to describe to those who have never had their identity turned into a target. The impact on mental health can be profound.

WHEN HATRED ENTERS DAILY LIFE

Mental health is deeply connected to one essential feeling: safety. When a person feels reasonably safe, they can think clearly, rest properly, trust others, and move through life with some degree of ease. When that safety is repeatedly disrupted, something shifts.

Antisemitism chips away at that foundation. It can show up in overt violence, threats, vandalism, harassment, conspiracy theories, exclusion, workplace hostility, school bullying, online abuse, and subtle social rejection. Sometimes it is loud and unmistakable. Sometimes it is disguised as a joke, a stereotype, or a passing remark that leaves a sting long after the words are spoken.

Even when a person is not physically harmed, the emotional toll can be significant. The body does not always wait for direct violence before it reacts. Anticipation alone can be enough. The nervous system begins to scan for danger. Sleep becomes lighter. Concentration is harder. Everyday tasks feel heavier. Trust narrows. Joy is interrupted.

This is one of the cruellest things about prejudice. It does not only wound in the moment. It can change the way someone moves through the world long afterwards.

THE QUIET WEIGHT OF HYERVIGILANCE

Many people who live with persistent prejudice develop a kind of emotional alertness that becomes second nature. They may think carefully about where they go, what they say, how openly they identify, which spaces feel safe, and who can be trusted. They may avoid conflict, avoid visibility, or avoid speaking altogether. To outsiders, this may look like caution or withdrawal. Inside, it often feels like fatigue.

Hypervigilance is exhausting. It asks the mind to stay partly on guard even during ordinary moments. A family dinner, a child’s school event, a university lecture, a synagogue service, a conversation at work, or even scrolling on a phone can become emotionally loaded. Instead of relaxing into life, the person is managing risk.

That ongoing tension can increase anxiety and emotional distress. It can also affect relationships. Loved ones may become more protective, more fearful, or more strained. Parents may worry about what their children are hearing at school. Young adults may struggle with whether to hide or reveal their Jewish identity. Grandparents may feel old historical wounds being reopened by present events.

Showing your Hand. Revealing issues in this 2023  Renascenca school, 5th grade, Brazil in Words Can Make a Difference, National Library of Israel (includes a wish for peace in Portuguese).   

Mental health is not only shaped by what happens directly to us. It is shaped by what we fear could happen, by what has happened before, and by what we see happening to people like us.

HISTORY NEVER SITS FAR AWAY

Antisemitism carries an unusually heavy historical burden. It is not a new hatred. It is ancient, recurring, and deeply woven into the memory of Jewish communities. That history matters because current hostility is rarely experienced in isolation. It often arrives carrying echoes of older trauma.

For many Jewish people, modern incidents can stir not only present fear but inherited grief. Family stories of expulsion, violence, displacement, persecution, or the Holocaust may sit quietly in the background for years, only to feel suddenly near again when public hatred rises. A slogan, a threat, a desecrated synagogue, or a wave of online abuse can activate something much deeper than a single event.

This is where the mental health impact becomes especially layered. The person is not only reacting to what is happening now. They may also be reacting to what history has taught their family and community to fear. That can intensify feelings of dread, sadness, anger, helplessness, and moral injury.

People sometimes underestimate the emotional force of communal memory. But trauma is not always neatly contained in the past. When prejudice returns in recognisable forms, the past can feel painfully present.

CHILDREN, STUDENTS AND THE LOSS OF INNOCENCE

There is something particularly heartbreaking about antisemitism affecting children and young people. Childhood and youth are meant to be times of formation, curiosity, belonging, and growth. When a Jewish child is teased, stereotyped, excluded, or blamed for world events they do not control, something deeply unfair happens. Their sense of safety is interrupted at an age when it is still being built.

Some children respond by becoming quiet. Others become anxious, angry, clingy, or withdrawn. Some begin complaining of headaches or stomach pain. Some dread school. Some ask their parents difficult questions far earlier than they should have to. Others decide it is easier not to mention being Jewish at all.

University students often face a different but equally painful challenge. They are old enough to understand the hostility around them, but still young enough to be deeply affected by rejection and exclusion. If a campus becomes a place where Jewish students feel judged, isolated, or unsafe, the impact can linger long after graduation. Education cannot flourish where fear is taking up too much space.

WHEN THE ONLINE WORLD NEVER LETS YOU BREATHE

One of the most damaging realities of modern antisemitism is that it no longer stays in one place. It follows people home. It arrives through phones, comment sections, private messages, videos, memes, and posts shared at speed and without reflection. Hatred that once might have been local can now become constant.

This matters for mental health because the mind needs places of refuge. It needs pauses. It needs quiet. But online hostility erodes those natural boundaries. A person can wake up, open their phone, and encounter dehumanising language before the day has even begun. They can see falsehoods repeated so often that they start to feel inescapable. They can watch strangers debate whether Jewish fear is legitimate, whether Jewish grief counts, or whether Jewish people somehow deserve what is happening to them.

That kind of environment creates emotional wear and tear. It can produce fear, rage, numbness, despair, and loneliness all at once. It can also leave people feeling trapped between wanting to stay informed and needing to protect their mental wellbeing.

WHY DOES ANTISEMITISM KEEP RETURNING?

This is one of the most painful questions of all. Why does antisemitism continue, even after everything history has shown us?

There is no single answer, but there are some recurring patterns. Antisemitism often thrives when people are frightened, polarised, or looking for someone to blame. It feeds on scapegoating. It turns complexity into accusation. It offers simple answers for complicated problems. In times of social strain, war, political upheaval, or economic anxiety, some people reach for narratives that tell them their suffering has a neat human target. Jews have been used in that way for centuries.

Antisemitism also survives through ignorance and conspiracy thinking. It grows where people know very little about Jewish life, Jewish diversity, or Jewish history, but feel confident repeating myths and stereotypes anyway. It spreads when anger is allowed to become collective blame. It deepens when public figures, institutions, or communities fail to challenge it clearly. We ask ourselves which “isms” are not based on ignorance.

And sometimes, if we are honest, it returns because human beings can be disturbingly willing to dehumanise others when it suits their politics, identity, or emotional needs.

None of this makes antisemitism logical. Hatred is not logical. But understanding some of its patterns helps explain why it keeps resurfacing in different forms, places, and languages.

EMOTIONAL COST OF BEING BLAMED FOR EVERYTHING

One of the most psychologically damaging aspects of antisemitism is collective blame. Jewish people around the world are often treated as though they are interchangeable, as though they all think the same, represent the same politics, and should answer for events far beyond their control. That is not criticism. That is prejudice.

To be blamed simply for being who you are is a deeply destabilising experience. It tells a person that their individuality does not matter. It strips away complexity and replaces it with suspicion. Over time, that can affect self-esteem, belonging, and emotional resilience. It can create the painful feeling that you are seen not as a person but as a symbol onto which others can project anger.

This can be particularly distressing when the people doing the blaming imagine themselves to be moral. There is a special kind of wound that comes from being dehumanised by those who believe they are standing for justice.

Learned behaviour, indoctrination, and brainwashing often begin quietly in the home, where children absorb what they hear, see, and experience from the adults around them. They may repeat profanities, prejudice, aggression, or harmful beliefs without fully understanding the meaning or impact, simply because these attitudes and behaviours have been normalised for them and never questioned. While this does not excuse the behaviour or make it acceptable, it does highlight the urgent need for ongoing education, emotional guidance, and mental health awareness to help break destructive cycles and teach children to think critically, act compassionately, and choose better.

SILENCE HURTS TOO

Not all mental health damage comes from direct hostility. Some of it comes from silence.

When antisemitic incidents occur and friends say nothing, colleagues say nothing, leaders hesitate, or institutions respond in vague and selective ways, the message received can be devastating. It can feel like Jewish pain is negotiable. It can feel like empathy has conditions. It can feel like some people are protected by moral concern while others are expected to absorb hatred quietly.

That silence can deepen loneliness and grief. It can also make people question their place in communities they once trusted. Being unseen is painful. Being unseen while in pain is worse.

WHAT HELPS?

There is no neat answer to the emotional burden of antisemitism, but some forms of support matter deeply.

Being believed matters. Having fear acknowledged matters. Community matters. Family matters. Faith, culture, friendship, therapy, trauma informed care, and safe spaces all matter. So does the simple human relief of not having to explain why something hurt.

Children need adults who listen. Students need institutions that protect them. Employees need workplaces that do not tolerate hostility disguised as opinion. Communities need leaders who can recognise antisemitism clearly, not only when it is politically convenient.

Compassion is not a luxury here. It is part of the repair.

A HUMAN PROBLEM, NOT A JEWSH PROBLEM ALONE

Antisemitism harms Jewish people directly, but it also tells us something broader about the health of a society. When any group is repeatedly scapegoated, threatened, stereotyped, or stripped of complexity, everyone should be concerned. It means fear is being normalised. It means empathy is becoming selective. It means human dignity is being made conditional.

The mental health impact of antisemitism deserves far more attention than it receives. Every slur, threat, smear, exclusion, attack, or silence lands somewhere real. It lands in a body. In a family. In a memory. In a child’s developing sense of safety. In a student’s confidence. In a parent’s fear. In a grandparent’s history. In the private space where someone is trying, with all their might, to keep going.

Antisemitism is never just an argument. It is never just noise. It is never just politics. It is a human wound. And until we speak about it with honesty, courage, and compassion, that wound will keep deepening in lives that are already carrying far too much.



About the writer:

Bev Moss-Reilly is a Jewish freelance content writer living in South Africa with a deep and heartfelt focus on mental health, emotional wellbeing, trauma, grief, and the unseen struggles people carry every day. Through her writing and her Mental Health Packs, she aims to bring comfort, awareness, compassion, and practical support to individuals, families, workplaces, and communities. Her work is rooted in empathy, dignity, and the belief that nobody should feel alone in their pain, especially in times of crisis.






UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN’S ULTIMATE DEGRADATION – HONOURING DR SOOLIMAN

Does South Africa’s premier university share today the same values as a supporter of terrorism against Jews?

By Lawrence Nowosenetz

The University of Cape Town (UCT) a formerly venerable university in South Africa, respected worldwide, has announced that it will be awarding an honorary doctorate to Dr Imtiaz Sooliman at its graduation ceremonies in March/April 2026.

The Doctor of Philosophy (honoris causa) is being bestowed on Dr Sooliman in recognition of his humanitarian work through his organization Gift of the Givers. In a statement by the Vice Chancellor of UCT, Professor Moses Moshabela, he described Dr Sooliman together with another doctoral recipient as a distinguished South African and “advanced values that lie at the heart of our institution.” He further lauded Dr Sooliman for “humanitarian leadership” and having served society with integrity. Qualities which he expounded are central to building a just, creative and humane society.

Law unto Himself. Vice Chancellor of UCT, Professor Moses Moshabela describes UCT honoree Dr Imtiaz Sooliman as advancing the “values that lie at the heart of our institution.” But does he?

For more than three decades, he has dedicated his life to humanitarian service without discrimination,” the Vice Chancellor continued. It is indeed so that Gift of the Givers, the organization which Dr Sooliman founded and still heads, has provided health care and supported communities and affected by natural disasters in South Africa, earthquakes in Haiti and Turkey, famine in Somalia and the conflicts in Gaza and Syria. However, the Vice Chancellor went further: “Sooliman’s work gives practical expression to the constitutional values of dignity, equality and freedom.”

The reality points otherwise. Dr Sooliman is an avowed Islamist and disciple of the Muslim Brotherhood. He supports Hamas and is a truculent and vocal inciter of anti-Zionist and Israel hatred. His record is abundantly clear and is well documented in his public utterances. In 2011, he received an award from the US designated terror organization Union of Good which (like Hamas) is a Muslim Brotherhood affiliate.

His thinly veiled antisemitic bigotry and hatred of Zionists leave nothing to the imagination. He publicly stated on 27 October 2025 and significantly at UCT:

“…we had to break the fear we have to break the money, and we had to break the thing antisemitism, and we know antisemitism is used to shut you up. So if we stand up against Zionists and they say you’re antisemitic because they want to cover their faults, then I’m 5000% antisemitic to speak the truth.

A vicious tirade of inflammatory hate speech, conspiracy theories and demonization which would have made Dr Goebbels proud. It is hard to reconcile this rhetoric with the constitutional values of dignity and equality. In short, the cherished liberal democracy that UCT purports to uphold.

Honoring Hamas. The man UCT will honor has no problem participating at protests in Cape Town under the banner “WE ARE ALL HAMAS” following that terrorist organization’s massacre of Jews on October 7, 2023. (Photo: Gallo Images/Die Burger/Jaco Marais)

The very notion of constitutional values and rule of law have been rejected by Dr Sooliman who said he follows Koranic law, not man-made laws. In an interview on 7 October 2024, Dr Sooliman said:

“I don’t follow international law or human law. I follow Koranic law. I am a Muslim. I don’t need any permission from anybody in the world to tell me what to do. I break the laws all the time. Breaking the law is laws of the West and people and governments. It’s not Islamic law. I follow Islamic law, and Islamic law overrides any other law. … I don’t have to follow any law. My law is very clear to me. Allah himself has instructed me. I don’t need men to tell me what to do. I don’t follow them.”

This is subversive of the very values UCT should be safeguarding. South Africa prides itself rightly on its long and hard-fought constitutional democracy, the protection of fundamental freedoms, the separation of powers and secularism. The antithesis of Dr Sooliman’s  benighted worldview. To honor a person who undermines so completely the raison d’etre of the Republic of South Africa is a travesty and betrayal of the most profundity and severity. An academic institution which is prepared to overlook this inescapable contradiction commits a gross lack of judgment and makes a mockery of not only itself but all South Africans who respect and show fealty to the Constitution. All the NGO’s and human rights lawyers who respect universal human rights should not abide this injustice. Hatred, racism and bigotry have emerged under the guise of the humanitarianism of Dr Sooliman.

The Koran is no repository of human rights and freedom. Among many other major shortfalls, women are suppressed, non-Muslims are not accorded equal citizenship under Islamic law. Christians and Jews historically were regarded as dhimmi or second-class citizens under Islamic rule. The separation of church and state as well as religious freedom are totally contradictory to the theocratic ideology of political Islam. Liberties such as freedom of thought, opinion and expression are suppressed. Nowhere is this more glaringly evident that in the Islamic Republic of Iran which has brutally suppressed dissent and murdered at least thirty thousand of its citizens, now in the throes of a war with Israel and the USA

Another egregious falsehood is crediting Dr Sooliman with providing humanitarian services without discrimination. During October and November 2024, Gift of the Givers posted at least 40 anti-Israel posts on its Facebook page. These posts did not call for peace, never condemned violence by Hamas and never mentioned Israeli victims or suffering. Certainly, no calls for the release of the hostages.

The humanitarian services of Gift of the Givers are partisan and far from neutral. While Gift of the Givers was active in Gaza providing aid to the local population, Dr Sooliman made no effort at all to assist the Israeli hostages held by Hamas over two years under appalling conditions. Such an egregious omission speaks to the lack of universality and integrity of Gift of the Givers as a humanitarian organization. This can be contrasted with the initiative of Gift of the Givers in negotiating successfully to secure the release of Pierre Korkie, the South African hostage held by terrorists in Yemen. He was however tragically killed by Al Qaeda shortly before his release.

True Colours. Decked out in green, Imtiaz Sooliman,  who has expressed that Jews “… control the world with money,” addresses a protest in Sea Point, Cape Town (above)  before demonstrators holding banners that read “Zionism is Racism” and “Boycott Apartheid Israel”. (Photo: Ashraf Hendricks)

The support of the South African ANC led government for Hamas and its backer Iran, indicates the state of capture by radical Islam. DIRCO, (South Africa’s Department of International Relations and Cooperation) and its foreign policy leans towards the global South, which includes undemocratic and unconstitutional countries which are not aligned with Western values. It is tragic to see UCT abandon these values and fall prey to the Islamist state capture of foreign policy.

Worth noting are the financial ties between at least two UCT Council members and Dr Sooliman/ Gift of the Givers. Dianna Yach, chair: HR committee donated R1 million to them in September 2025 through the Mauerberger Foundation Fund. Reeza Isaacs chair: Finance Committee and a senior Spar manager, appeared in a photograph on a Gift of the Givers Facebook page in February 2026, building Spar Group corporate partnership ties. These same persons sat on the UCT Council which approved bestowal of the honor. A more blatant conflict of interest and bias would be hard to find.

When a respected academic institution is prepared to bend its values and honor a person who is morally tainted and an outspoken adversary of traditional Western liberal values, there are no longer any standards left for UCT to support or teach. It becomes a broken institution.



*Feature picture: University of Cape Town



About the writer:

Born in Pretoria Lawrence Nowosenetz obtained his BA at University of the Witwatersrand and LLB at the University of South Africa. He has been admitted as an Attorney in South Africa and as an advocate in South Africa. He practiced at the Pretoria and Johannesburg Bar and worked as a human rights and labour lawyer at the Legal Resources Centre a public interest law firm. Lawrence was Awarded a Fulbright Scholarship and completed professional internship in the USA. He was a a labour arbitrator and mediator, part time Senior Commissioner at the Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) as well as a panelist at Tokiso Dispute Settlement. He was a member of the South African Jewish Board of Deputies and Pretoria Chairman. He has also served as an Acting Judge of the Hight Court, South Africa. He now lives in Tel Aviv.