Reinders writes that Chinese stereotypes of Jews are based in positive generalizations more than negative ones.[9]: 98–99 Jews are praised for valuing education like Chinese, although this is often also framed competitively.[9]: 99 Some mass market books associate Jews with wealth-building.[9]: 98–99 Some scholars write that philosemitic stereotypes in China can quickly turn antisemitic.[4][10][11] According to Tuvia Gering of the Atlantic Council, anti-Semitic conspiracy theories have historically been a useful tool for the Chinese government against Western countries.[12]
According to the polls made by the Anti-Defamation League in 2014, roughly 20 percent of Chinese people have a negative attitude towards Jews, and the older people are, the more likely they are to have a negative perception of Jews.[7][16] Since 2015, descendants of the Kaifeng Jews have come under government pressure and suspicion.[17]
The May 2021 events in Gaza precipitated Chinese state-run media invoking antisemitic tropes and sentiments, encouraged by top Chinese diplomats, and rehashed by well-known Chinese political commentators.[19] In particular, Israel's embassy in Beijing accused China Global Television Network (CGTN) of "blatant antisemitism" when it broadcast a program during the 2021 Israel–Palestine crisis, in which host Zheng Junfeng claimed that Jews were in control of global finances and that "powerful lobbies" of Jews were responsible for the U.S. government's support for Israel.[20][21][22]
Antisemitic reactions to the Israel–Hamas war were widespread on Chinese state media and social media.[26][27][28][29] Antisemitic comments were not removed from Chinese social media sites.[30][31][32] Sympathetic portrayals of Hamas have proliferated on Bilibili.[33] In a November 2023 interview with Voice of America, Israel's ambassador to China, Irit Ben-Abba, spoke about Sino-Israeli relations and antisemitism on the Chinese Internet, stating that "The antisemitic, anti-Israel discourse that we saw quite intensively in the last month has subsided", and arguing that China's relations with Israel have not changed.[34]China Central Television (CCTV) falsely claimed that "Jews represent just 3% of the American population but control 70% of its wealth."[32] In response to the 2024 pro-Palestinian protests on university campuses, former editor-in-chief of the Global TimesHu Xijin stated that the protests show that "Jewish political and business alliance's control over American public opinion has declined."[35]
In January 2024, CNN reported that antisemitic content was proliferating on Chinese social media.[36]EU bureau chief of China DailyChen Weihua responded that, according to CNN's logic, the United Nations and even the majority of the world's population were inciting anti-Semitism because they had all criticized Israel's actions in Gaza.[37]
Antisemitic tropes have also been spread online by the Ministry of Public Security's Spamouflage influence operation.[12] In October 2024, The Washington Post reported that Spamouflage targeted U.S. representative Barry Moore (R-AL) with accusations that he won his primary because of "the bloody Jewish consortium," as well as calling him a "Jewish dog", among other antisemitic tropes. Moore has been critical of the Chinese Communist Party, and has directed support for Taiwanese independence. Moore is not Jewish.[38]
^ abcdeReinders, Eric (2024). Reading Tolkien in Chinese: Religion, Fantasy, and Translation. Perspectives on Fantasy series. London, UK: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN9781350374645.
^Haime, Jordyn (5 August 2022). "This American rabbi is fighting antisemitism in China with online videos". J. The Jewish News of Northern California. Archived from the original on 9 December 2022. Retrieved 9 December 2022. The Fugu Plan never came to fruition, but the antisemitic and ultranationalist political blogger Yu Li (who blogs under the name Sima Nan) has shared the story with his nearly 3 million followers. In a 20-minute-long antisemitic rant, he says the Fugu Plan is evidence that the Jews colluded with the Japanese to establish a Jewish homeland on Chinese territory — a conspiracy that fits a nationalist narrative that China is constantly under attack by foreign powers.
^Fu, Huimin; Liu, Xiaohan; Gao, Hanrui (30 January 2024). "CNN称中国网友"反犹"遭回怼" [CNN's claim that Chinese netizens are "anti-Semitic" is met with dislike]. Sina (in Simplified Chinese). China Daily. Archived from the original on 20 April 2024. Retrieved 20 April 2024. 中国日报欧盟分社社长陈卫华随后回怼,按照CNN的逻辑,联合国甚至全世界大多数人都在煽动"反犹太主义",因为他们都批评了以色列在加沙的暴行。 [Chen Weihua, head of China Daily's European Union bureau, then responded that, according to CNN's logic, the United Nations and even the majority of the world's population were inciting "anti-Semitism" because they all criticized Israel's atrocities in Gaza.]