Categories: Guest Blog / The Snag
Brooklyn’s Anti-Gentrication Groups are Pushing Antisemitic Narratives and Activism
While we have all read more coherent arguments, the identity of the “invaders” and the “theft of land” is clear. And just as these degentrification orgs deny the Jewish people’s connection to the land of Israel and dismiss them as colonizers, so too they deny the historic Jewish character of the neighborhoods in mid-Brooklyn. E4F is specifically focused on Flatbush and East Flatbush, and defines those neighborhoods quite broadly. The all night #FlatbushFireworks harassment which has gone on for months was at the very least protected from shutdown and promoted as legitimate and healthy anti-gentrifier protest by E4F to the uncritical reporting of Buzzfeed, the NY Times, and others. And the point was harassment of “gentrifiers.” When one woman attempted to organize to stop the nightly industrial firework harassment, E4F set upon her with overt, racist hatred.“The legacy of the US is built on the invasion and theft of land from the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas, to the current theft of land from historically low-to-middle income communities of color by city governments and real estate developers. Many of the tactics displayed in Palestine are mirrored in the struggles within cities here in the United States, from environmental racism and the denial of safe drinking water, to the segregation, imprisonment, and disenfranchisement of communities of color struggling for justice. The struggle against gentrification is global. What we face in Brooklyn is just the latest in a long line of colonizing ventures aimed at the appropriation of land and resources from Indigenous peoples, people of color, and working class communities. We stand shoulder-to-shoulder with all those fighting for liberation. BAN stands in complete solidarity with the struggle for Palestinian liberation, decries Israel’s occupation and human rights abuses, and calls for an immediate end to United States’ funding of this apartheid regime.”
These groups attack “gentrifiers,” but on their websites and social media accounts, it is clear whom they really mean. Through the constant reference to Palestine and the “colonizers” in Palestine and Brooklyn, it is clear that Jews are to blame for Brooklyn as well. It is worth noting that Brooklyn Borough president Eric Adams backed E4F’s absurd and deadly demand for protection of fireworks harassment from police intervention. Beyond “Palestine to Brooklyn” comparisons, E4F has a consistent habit of villainizing hasidic landlords in pictures, protests, and copious videos to make it clear who is disproportionately responsible for “colonizing” their neighborhood. The Jewish community appears unaware of the significance and relevance of these groups, even though they are critical in pushing a narrative of hate and overt harassment. Though there are a few notable exceptions such as City Councilman Chaim Deutsch, these groups are presented as heroes without any skepticism from the mainstream press or pushback from the organized Jewish community, and that should give us pause. No one is going to stand up for us if we don’t stand up for ourselves. Just the opposite, as Equality for Flatbush support includes Jewish led orgs such as Soros’s Open Society Foundations via subsidiaries, including their fiscal sponsor, Black Alliance for Just Immigration. These anti-gentrification groups will continue to target the Jewish community for hate and harassment. And they are much stronger and better positioned than before the riots started, and presumably, much better funded."Equality for Flatbush, which calls itself a “people of color-led, multinational grass-roots organization that does anti-police repression, affordable housing and anti-gentrification/anti-displacement organizing,” lashed out at a now-deleted Facebook group, Peaceful Ditmas Park, and a law professor who helped write the petition.
Equality for Flatbush said Peaceful Ditmas Park was “a majority-white Facebook group where pro-gentrification and white supremacist sentiment is highly prevalent” and called the law professor, Irina Manta, a “Ditmas Park Karen,” using what has become shorthand for an entitled white woman.
The organization also put out a statement calling summertime fireworks “a culturally accepted norm of Brooklyn” and “an act of resistance and a show of solidarity with the global #BlackLivesMatter rebellion.”


July 3, 2026 







