Antisemitism in contemporary Czechia is generally less visible than in other parts of Central and Eastern Europe, yet it persists in indirect and adaptive forms. Rather than manifesting through organised movements or frequent physical attacks, antisemitism most often appears via online conspiracy theories, symbolic vandalism, historical trivialisation, and the circulation of global antisemitic narratives—particularly those linked to Israel, liberal democracy, or alleged “global elites.” Periodic vandalism of Jewish sites and spikes in online hate speech during international crises underscore the persistence of these patterns. While surveys indicate comparatively low levels of explicit antisemitic attitudes, weak enforcement mechanisms and widespread historical distancing allow coded antisemitic tropes to circulate with limited consequence.
In recent years, antisemitism has increasingly migrated to digital spaces, intersecting with anti-EU sentiment, COVID-19 disinformation, and narratives portraying Jews as agents of hidden power. While far-right actors rarely foreground antisemitism explicitly, its symbolic language—financial conspiracies, media manipulation, and moral corruption—remains embedded in populist discourse. Sporadic vandalism of cemeteries and memorials illustrates the endurance of antisemitic symbolism despite the absence of mass mobilisation.
Historical Foundations, Rupture, and Post-War Silencing
Jewish life in the lands of Bohemia and Moravia spans more than a millennium and gave rise to one of Europe’s most influential Jewish cultural centres, particularly in Prague; yet this long coexistence was repeatedly shaped by legal exclusion, social discrimination, and episodic violence that embedded antisemitism within social and political structures well before the twentieth century. The Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1939 constituted a decisive rupture: under the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Jews were systematically stripped of rights, dispossessed of property, deported, and murdered as part of Nazi racial policy. Theresienstadt (Terezín) functioned simultaneously as a transit ghetto to extermination camps and as a propaganda instrument designed to conceal genocide, while approximately 80,000 Jews from Bohemia and Moravia were killed—effectively erasing centuries of Jewish presence and creating a profound demographic and cultural vacuum.
After 1945, Jewish survivors returning from concentration camps or exile encountered bureaucratic obstruction, social indifference, and latent hostility, particularly in disputes over restitution and property recovery; although the Czech lands did not experience large-scale post-war pogroms, antisemitism persisted through resentment, pressures to assimilate, and moral discomfort surrounding survivor return. Following the communist takeover in 1948, Jewish persecution was absorbed into a universalised antifascist narrative that obscured Jewish specificity and local complicity, while state-led “anti-Zionist” campaigns—especially after 1967—reintroduced antisemitic stereotypes in ideological language. Holocaust memory was depoliticised and instrumentalised, leaving questions of responsibility, continuity, and accountability largely unresolved until after 1989, when democratic transition enabled renewed research, restitution frameworks, and Jewish cultural life, even as liberalisation also created space for conspiracy movements, far-right subcultures, and historical relativism.
Memory, Accountability, and Democratic Resilience
Engagement with antisemitism by malign actors is shaped less by overt hostility than by selective memory. Dominant narratives emphasise Czech victimhood under Nazism while marginalising discussions of collaboration, opportunism, and post-war exclusion. This imbalance allows antisemitism to persist as an abstract or external problem rather than a domestic responsibility.
Democratic resilience depends on more than commemoration. It requires consistent prosecution of antisemitic acts, recognition of antisemitism as a distinct form of hatred, and educational approaches linking historical persecution to contemporary democratic values. The small but symbolically significant Jewish community remains a litmus test: how Czech society responds to subtle, coded, or politically inconvenient antisemitism will continue to reflect the depth of its commitment to pluralism and historical accountability.



