“Contaminated with apartheid and Zionism.”
The anti-Israel mob have officially stopped pretending this isn’t about targeting Jews.
Stickers calling to boycott Israeli goods were placed on a box of matzah in Sainsbury’s in Clifton, Bristol. However, the manufacturer – Rakusen’s – is based in Yorkshire.
This is not a product from Israel. This is a British kosher manufacturer, based in the north of England. Any pretence of this being about Israel has dropped.
They simply saw kosher products in a supermarket and decided that it was fair game to vandalise.
In the 1930s, Nazi propaganda used analogies which compared Jews to parasites, in an effort to dehumanise them and to justify the cleansing of German society from what was perceived to be an unhygienic, contaminating threat. Boycotts of Jewish goods and businesses were also an attempt to rid society of Jews. These stickers echo those disturbing ideas.
We understand that the store manager was alerted and that a police investigation is currently underway.
The targeting of Jewish goods, which bear no connection to Israel, in the name of activism only does one thing: it targets Jews.