Anti-Palestinian Racism: The Antizionist Movement’s Effort to Institutionalize Antisemitism Using a Civil Rights Framework
The pro-”Palestinian” movement is successfully advancing “Anti-Palestinian Racism” or “APR” as a long-overdue civil rights framework. It is not. APR is a carefully engineered mechanism which uses the disguise of civil rights to embed antisemitic narratives into institutional policy while immunizing those narratives from challenge.
APR, as defined, does not protect people from unequal treatment. It protects an antisemitic movement from criticism, embeds antisemitism into official policy, and silences the members of the Jewish community and others who raise concerns about it.
A. What Is APR?
APR was developed by the Arab Canadian Lawyers Association (ACLA) in collaboration with the Institute for the Understanding of Anti-Palestinian Racism (IUAPR). They define APR as "a form of racism that silences, excludes, erases, stereotypes, defames or dehumanizes Palestinians or their narratives." [1]
The definition, itself, is fatally flawed. Existing federal and state civil rights law already protect Arabs, Muslims, and “Palestinians” from discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, and religion under the Civil Rights Act of 1964 [2] and analogous state statutes. APR is legally superfluous.
This raises the obvious question: what, then, is its actual purpose?
B. Why APR is Not a Civil Rights Framework
The foundational principle of civil rights law is straightforward; it protects people from unequal ”treatment”, not from disagreement with “ideas.” APR abandons this principle entirely.
The phrase "or their narratives" in APR's definition, is telling. By extending protection to narratives, specifically, claims about Israel, Zionism, and Jewish history, APR redefines disagreement as racism. The practical implications expose the fraud:
Under APR:
● challenging accusations of Israel’s genocide becomes racial discrimination,
● opposing BDS, an antisemitic boycott movement which singles out the Jewish State for treatment, but applied to no other nation, is racism, and
● Supporting Israel's right to exist makes you a racist.
APR does not protect people from hatred. It protects antizionism, a racist ideology, from accountability.
A further fatal flaw is that it extends its protections to non-Arab, non-Muslim, non-”Palestinian” ”allies," effectively treating individuals as members of a legally protected class based solely on their advocacy position. This is not a legitimate civil rights framework. A difference of opinion, without more, is not discrimination.
C. A Vehicle for Antisemitism
APR's central deception is structural: it embeds antisemitic narratives into official frameworks — then shields those narratives from challenge by labeling any criticism as racism. This is a calculated strategy; the deliberate shift of antisemitic expression into ostensibly antizionist language through another tool of warfare, the civil rights platform. (See Global Peace for Israel’s article titled Antizionism: Today’s New Jew Hatred).
Organizations promoting APR routinely characterize Israelis and Jews as "settler colonialists" and accuse them of “ethnic cleansing” “genocide” and “apartheid,” treating these characterizations as established fact which institutions are obligated to accept. [3] By extending civil rights protections to narratives, let alone antisemitic false narratives, APR effectively transforms fact-based evidence or truth-telling into a civil rights violation.
APR does not merely shield an ideology. It erases Jewish identity and history. The narratives which APR protects categorically deny Jewish ties to their ancestral land; any Jewish person who asserts the historical, religious, and cultural foundations of their own identity can be accused, under APR, of racism. The framework does not just silence Jewish voices. It delegitimizes Jewish existence itself.
D. The Institutionalization of APR - A Clear and Present Danger
APR is no longer a simple advocacy position. It is being actively introduced, accepted and normalized through various frameworks and institutions, including those in local government, professional associations and on university campuses. [4]
These frameworks then migrate to other institutions, and each adoption normalizes the next. This is how antizionist institutional capture works: not through force, but through frameworks where antisemitism becomes the official truth and adopted into public policy. This time under the banner of civil rights. That, however, is not a civil rights protection but an ideological capture.
E. Conclusion
The key danger is the institutionalization of a framework which treats antisemitic lies or falsehoods as official truth or fact, which treats disagreement as discrimination, and enshrines antisemitism into public policy under a civil rights enforcement.
A genuine commitment to civil rights demands that we protect all people from unequal treatment. That includes the Jewish People.
Footnotes
[1] https://antipalestinianracism.org/
https://www.antipalestinianracism.com/
https://www.canarablaw.org/anti-palestinian-racism
[2] https://www.justice.gov/crt/fcs/TitleVI
[3] www.cair.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/The-Right-to-be-Different-2026.pdf
https://www.instagram.com/arabcanadianlawyersassoc/
https://www.instagram.com/antipalestinianracism/
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vJhc-tsx0fggkTw0jCns4fcikyDuDOdU/view
https://ethnicstudies.berkeley.edu/resources/dismantling-anti-palestinian-racism
https://pomeps.org/anti-palestinian-racism-analyzing-the-unnamed-and-suppressed-reality
https://learn.library.torontomu.ca/c.php?g=739323&p=5401904
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUhrL5mZUVk
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11249121/
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/716576
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