While physical incidents such as vandalism of Jewish cemeteries and buildings, or harassment of Jewish individuals are rare, antisemitic hate speech (e.g. threats targeting Jewish organisations) is fairly common, mainly occurring in the online sphere, manifesting in coded language and wrapped in conspiracy theories. Antisemitic narratives have been amplified by digital misinformation and by the polarisation of public debate, particularly around migration, international finance, and cultural liberalism. Surveys by the Action and Protection Foundation indicate that over one in five Hungarians still express antisemitic beliefs—one of the highest rates in the EU—revealing how fragile progress remains despite formal legal protections, and how prejudice remains embedded in Hungary’s social fabric.
From Persecution to Manipulation: Historical Continuities
Hungary’s modern antisemitism has deep political roots dating back to the second half of the 19th century, culminating in the catastrophic rupture of the Holocaust. At the outbreak of the Second World War, Hungary had one of the largest and most integrated Jewish populations in Central Europe—around 825,000 people, including converts and those of mixed ancestry. Under Miklós Horthy’s authoritarian regime, aligned with Nazi Germany, “Jewish Laws” introduced from 1938 defined Jews by ancestry and excluded them from public life and professions. Following the German occupation in March 1944, the collaborationist Arrow Cross Party accelerated persecution: over 400,000 Hungarian Jews were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau within eight weeks, while thousands were executed along the Danube in Budapest. By the end of the war, nearly three-quarters of Hungary’s pre-war Jewish population—around 565,000 people—had been murdered, destroying centuries of Jewish presence and creating a profound demographic and cultural rupture.
After 1945, and particularly following communist consolidation in 1949, Jewish life entered a paradoxical period of both protection and suppression. While overt antisemitism was officially outlawed, Jewish political and cultural autonomy was dismantled, Holocaust memory was suppressed, and restitution remained limited, contributing to a broader social silence and unresolved questions of responsibility. The 1956 Hungarian Revolution briefly opened public space, but its suppression by Soviet forces reinforced repression, even as limited religious life continued under close control. Under János Kádár’s regime, Hungary became relatively more permissive, allowing modest Jewish revival; however, following the Six-Day War, Soviet-aligned “anti-Zionist” campaigns reintroduced antisemitic tropes in ideological form, reinforcing suspicion toward Jewish individuals and communities while continuing to obscure the specificity of the Holocaust.
The Return of the Repressed
Democratisation in 1989 reopened public space for Jewish renewal but also for extremist narratives. Far-right parties such as MIÉP, then Jobbik and subsequently Mi Hazánk, as well as far-right groups and media outlets close to nationalist movements, popularised antisemitic tropes, particularly during the 2008–2010 financial crisis and the 2015 migration debates. Since 2015, the government’s anti-migration campaigns have also exploited antisemitic conspiracy theories. In the first half of the 2010s, the public commemoration of wartime figures implicated in antisemitic policies—such as Regent Horthy— and the relativising of Hungary’s role in the Holocaust provoked international concern.
Despite Hungary’s legal protections for religious communities, modern antisemitism in Hungary is characterized by covert prejudice and othering. Jewish organisations, educators, and memorial initiatives—such as those at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Budapest—continue to defend historical truth amid attempts at distortion and relativisation. Hungary’s experience reveals that antisemitism is not a remnant of the past but a recurring test of democratic resilience.
Misinformation & disinformation
“Jews secretly control governments, banks, and the media.”
A classic conspiracy narrative reframed as “global elites” or “hidden networks,” often pushed through memes, influencer clips, and “follow the money” threads. Disinformation accounts stitch unrelated facts into a single plot, implying Jews as the coordinating force behind democracy, capitalism, migration, or “the EU.” It launders antisemitism through coded language
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(“bankers,” “Soros,” “Rothschilds”), making it harder to moderate while keeping the same scapegoating logic.
“Zionists run a ‘shadow government’ and must be resisted.”
This extremist trope recasts democratic institutions as occupied by Jews, portraying violence as “self-defence.” It spreads in fringe forums and cross-platform repost chains, then re-enters mainstream spaces as ironic slang or “anti-globalist” content. Disinformation tactics include selective screenshots, fake “leaked” documents, and mislabelled symbols to imply secret
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Jewish command structures—turning political anger into an antisemitic worldview.
“The Protocols’ prove the Jewish plan to dominate the world.”
A known antisemitic forgery entitled ‘The Protocols of the Elders of Zion’, which fuelled the rise of antisemitism in Nazi Germany and Imperial Russia, is often repackaged as “suppressed history,” circulated via PDFs, subtitled videos, and “thread” summaries. Disinformation communities claim censorship as proof of truth, then connect the text to modern events (wars, markets, pandemics).
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The manipulation lies in presenting a fabricated document as documentary evidence, and in using its storyline as a template to interpret any crisis as Jewish orchestration.
“Jews serve Israel over their home country.”
This narrative frames Jewish civic participation as suspect, often triggered by Middle East escalations. It spreads through “security” talk, loyalty tests, and insinuations about dual passports or “foreign influence.” Misinformation filters include cherry-picked examples of individual Jewish voices, then generalising them to all Jews. The move is rhetorical: it turns ordinary pluralism into “betrayal,” legitimising exclusion from public life and harassment.
Holocaust denial and relativisation
Denial content – that the Holocaust is exaggerated, invented, or ‘just history wars’ – circulates via “debunking” videos, fake statistics, and misused archival images, often paired with claims that remembrance is a Jewish power tool. Disinformation techniques include quote-mining historians, mistranslating documents, and presenting fringe “research” as scholarly debate. Even when framed as “questions,”
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the aim is to erode shared factual ground and normalise antisemitic hostility by delegitimising Jewish trauma.
Blood libel: “Jews harm children or traffic organs.”
A medieval trope is modernised into claims about kidnapping rings, organ theft, or ritual harm – now spread via sensational “warning” posts and manipulated photos. Disinformation accounts exploit moral panic mechanics: urgent language, anonymous “insiders,” and calls to “protect children.” Filtering narratives detach the accusation from Jews explicitly – naming “Zionists” or “globalists” – while keeping the same allegation of inherently murderous Jewish nature.
The ‘Israel are Nazis’ heuristic
This appears as political commentary but functions as disinformation when it acts as a shortcut for the scapegoating of Jewish people or collapses history into a provocation that denies Jewish self-understanding and erases Nazi genocide. It spreads through viral comparison images and sloganised moral equivalence, often during conflict spikes. The key mechanism is ‘frame hijacking’, using Holocaust language to delegitimise Jewish identity and community safety, not to analyse policy.
“Jews created or profit from crises to reshape society.”
A flexible conspiracy container: any socioeconomic shock – for example, COVID, wars, migration – becomes evidence of a Jewish plot. Disinformation channels remix real anxieties with fabricated causality and scapegoats. Common tactics include forged “plans,” fake charts, and misattributed quotes, then amplification by coordinated networks. The narrative survives fact-checks because it constantly mutates – swapping actors and slogans while preserving the core antisemitic blame.