NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani criticized for 'intifada' remarks

In a tearful address amid the backlash, the Democratic candidate said that “it pains me to be called an antisemite.”
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Zohran Mamdani, a Democrat running for mayor of New York, drew pushback from Jewish organizations and political leaders this week after he appeared to defend the slogan “globalize the intifada.”

In an interview with The Bulwark posted Tuesday, Mamdani was asked whether the expression made him uncomfortable. In response, he said the slogan captured “a desperate desire for equality and equal rights in standing up for Palestinian human rights.” He said the U.S. Holocaust Museum had used the word “intifada” in Arabic-language descriptions of the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising against Nazi Germany.

Mamdani, a progressive New York state assemblyman who has forcefully criticized the Israeli government, also addressed the rise in antisemitism since the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack and the war in Gaza, saying anti-Jewish prejudice was “a real issue in our city” and one that the next mayor should focus on “tackling.” He added that he believes the city’s community safety offices should increase funding for anti-hate crime measures.

The Washington-based U.S. Holocaust Museum sharply condemned Mamdani’s remarks Wednesday on X: “Exploiting the Museum and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising to sanitize ‘globalize the intifada’ is outrageous and especially offensive to survivors. Since 1987 Jews have been attacked and murdered under its banner. All leaders must condemn its use and the abuse of history.”

The museum did not immediately respond to a request for comment on how it had translated the Warsaw Uprising into Arabic.

Jonathan Greenblatt, the chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League, decried the phrase on X as an “explicit incitement to violence.” Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y., who is Jewish, said in a statement that the word “intifada” is “well understood to refer to the violent terror attacks against innocent Israeli civilians that occurred during the First and Second Intifadas.”

“If Mr. Mamdani is unwilling to heed the request of major Jewish organizations to condemn this unquestionably antisemitic phrase,” Goldman added, “then he is unfit to lead a city with 1.3 million Jews — the largest Jewish population outside of Israel.”

Mamdani has also faced criticism from some of the other candidates in the crowded Democratic primary field — including the front-runner in the polls, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Cuomo’s polling advantage has narrowed in recent weeks as Mamdani, 33, a democratic socialist, built momentum and nabbed a key endorsement from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.

In a statement, Cuomo called on all the contenders to “denounce” Mamdani’s comments and invoked recent violent attacks on Jewish people nationwide.

“At a time when we are seeing antisemitism on the rise and in fact witnessing once again violence against Jews resulting in their deaths in Washington, D.C., or their burning in Denver — we know all too well that words matter,” Cuomo said in part, referring to the killing of two Israeli Embassy employees and an attack on Israeli hostage advocates in Boulder, Colorado. “They fuel hate. They fuel murder.”

The war in Gaza and the spike in antisemitism have loomed large over the mayoral primary. Cuomo, 67, casts himself as a fierce defender of Israel and pitches himself to Jewish residents and ideological moderates as the obvious choice. Mamdani, who has characterized Israel’s conduct in Gaza as “genocide,” gained traction partly thanks to enthusiastic support from the city’s progressives.

Mamdani, speaking to reporters at a media event in Harlem on Wednesday, addressed the outcry over his interview with The Bulwark and the ensuing pushback, saying in part that “it pains me to be called an antisemite.”

“I’ve said at every opportunity that there is no room for antisemitism in this city, in this country. I’ve said that because that is something I personally believe,” he said.

He broke down crying as he described the vitriol he has received as he seeks to become the first Muslim mayor of New York.

“I get messages that say: ‘The only good Muslim is a dead Muslim.’ I get threats on my life, on the people that I love,” Mamdani said, his eyes welling up with tears.

The primary is Tuesday. Scandal-plagued Mayor Eric Adams, who won election as a Democrat in 2021, is not participating in the party’s nominating contest. He is reportedly petitioning to run on two independent ballot lines: “EndAntiSemitism” and “Safe&Affordable.”

CORRECTION (June 25, 2025, 1:37 p.m. ET): An earlier version of this article misstated the event described by the U.S. Holocaust Museum as an “intifada” in Arabic. It was the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, not the 1944 Warsaw Uprising.