President Herzog In NYC: Mamdani Shows ‘Utter Contempt’ For Jewish Nation State
While spending several days in New York, Israeli President Isaac Herzog delivered sweeping remarks to the Biennial National Assembly of the American Zionist Movement, addressing representatives from more than fifty organizations. His talk moved through a range of concerns—from the sharp rise in antisemitism across the United States to Israel’s security challenges and recent political developments affecting Jewish life in New York.
Herzog opened by voicing deep alarm at the climate facing Jews in America. He said he was “extremely disturbed” by what he sees as a dramatic escalation in hostility. “Antisemitism has never been so apparent in the public discourse,” he told the audience, noting that this hostility comes “from both the left and right.” As he put it bluntly, “no Jew should be harassed anywhere in the world because of his or her faith.” Herzog emphasized collective responsibility in pushing back: “We have to fight together, with all the legal tools we have, to combat antisemitism and explain our case that the only nation state of the Jewish people is protecting the free world and is a beacon of tikkun olam to the entire world.”
Turning to New York, home to the largest Jewish population outside Israel, Herzog expressed unease about local political rhetoric. Without naming him, he referenced the incoming mayor, saying the city now has “a mayor-elect who shows utter contempt to the nation state of the Jewish people.” In the wake of demonstrations outside a Manhattan shul hosting an Aliyah program, Herzog stressed that safeguarding the ability of Jews to worship freely is non-negotiable. He reminded the audience that “Jews have prayed three times a day for hundreds of years and thousands of years to Jerusalem, and we yearn to go back to Jerusalem-this is a basic rule of Judaism.” What troubled him most, he said, was that “The fact that a mayor-elect, an elected official, speaks in contempt about this whole notion, which is part and parcel of all of us here and the great Zionist movement, worries me a lot.”
Herzog then confronted head-on the accusations that Israel has engaged in genocide. He dismissed the charge unequivocally, maintaining that “Israel is a law-abiding nation. The law is part of our DNA.” He insisted that “Our guidelines are the rules of international humanitarian law. Our sons and daughters went to fight in order to defend our people and operate according to the rules.” Acknowledging the imperfections of any military campaign, he noted that “if we make mistakes, we also expose them and deal with them.” Herzog contrasted the claims against Israel with its actual conduct: “Israel was never operating in any genocidal form. On the contrary, we supplied humanitarian aid from day one. I was extremely active on this. We care for the pain of the people in Gaza. We care, and I still care very much, for their future.”
He also spoke about the emotional and national aftermath of the October 7 atrocities. Israeli society, he said, continues to show extraordinary strength despite the trauma that lingers from that day. “We’re a very strong, resilient nation which carries a scar of agony from generation to generation, and in this generation, we are carrying the scar of pain and agony of October 7th and onwards.”
Addressing the regional threat environment, Herzog warned that Israel’s adversaries are far from retreating. “Iran is trying to regroup and continue the battle against Israel big time with all of their capabilities,” he cautioned. He added that “They want to get to the bomb. They want to advance their terror agencies. We follow this closely. We see what they’re trying to do in Lebanon. We see what they’re trying to do elsewhere. We should not be naive for a moment.”
{Matzav.com}
