The JAZ Connect platform aims to map, document, and amplify anti-Zionist Jewish voices — individuals, organisations, movements, and traditions — in a publicly accessible and strategically useful form. But is it really a new contribution? Does anything like it already exist?
The answer is no — not in this form, not with this scope, and not with this purpose.
What Exists Now
There are, of course, many anti-Zionist Jewish organisations and initiatives. Some of the most visible include:
- Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) – the largest anti-Zionist Jewish organisation in the U.S.
- IfNotNow – a movement of young American Jews opposing the occupation
- Jews for Justice for Palestinians (UK) – longstanding and outspoken
- Independent Jewish Voices (Canada) – a national platform for anti-Zionist perspectives
- Neturei Karta – ultra-Orthodox and vocally anti-Zionist for religious reasons
Beyond these are local synagogues, student groups, academic figures, and cultural workers who speak out, organise, and resist.
But these efforts are:
- Organisational rather than structural
- National rather than global
- Often siloed or isolated
- Fragmented across ideological, generational, and religious lines
There is no unified infrastructure to record, connect, or make searchable the vast, diverse, and growing body of Jewish anti-Zionism.
What’s Missing
There is no platform — as of yet — that offers:
- A living, global directory of anti-Zionist Jewish individuals and organisations
- Searchable metadata by geography, ideology, role, and focus
- An archival and public memory function that documents this movement across time
- A resource built not just for internal Jewish re-evaluation, but to support the broader Palestinian liberation movement
- A space for anti-Zionist Jews to find one another, reflect, and de-Zionise collectively
JAZ Connect proposes to do exactly that.
Why It Hasn’t Been Done
There may be reasons — implicit and explicit — why such a directory doesn’t yet exist:
- Fear of recentring Jews within the Palestinian struggle
- Concern over backlash, doxxing, and social/professional risk
- Absence of funding or institutional support
- A desire to avoid appearing self-congratulatory or factional
These concerns are valid — but they are not sufficient to justify absence.
On the contrary, the lack of such a tool has allowed Zionism to continue claiming a monopoly on Jewish identity — and allowed anti-Zionist Jews to remain isolated, invisible, or denied as aberrations.
Why It Matters Now
JAZ Connect doesn’t propose to create a movement. That already exists.
It proposes to record it. To connect it. To make it undeniable.
A tool like JAZ Connect would:
- Strengthen solidarity
- Counter Zionist propaganda
- Support Jews seeking to de-Zionise themselves and their communities
- Offer Palestinians and others a reliable map of principled allies
The need for it is not theoretical. It is strategic. And long overdue.
JAZ Connect is not a new idea. It is a long-neglected one.
Now is the time to make it real.
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