Sunday, May 10, 2026

Leftist scum are shameless liars

Non-profit group has twisted the meaning of ‘genocide’ — and hijacked a Zionist hero’s name — to suit its own woke purposes

Few figures loom larger in the moral and legal history of the 20th century than Raphael Lemkin, the Polish Jewish jurist who coined the word “genocide” after losing nearly his entire family in the Holocaust. Lemkin witnessed the epitome of evil, and then gave the world the language to describe it. 

The word “genocide” exists because he understood that what had been done to the Jewish people was so unprecedented that existing legal vocabulary could not define it properly. He spent the rest of his life ensuring that the world would never again lack the words — or the legal framework — to confront such crimes.

That is precisely why what is happening now is so grotesque.

The family of Raphael Lemkin is taking legal action against the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention, a Philadelphia-based nonprofit that has hijacked his name and repurposed it for its own warped woke agenda. 

Raphael Lemkin coined the term genocide after losing nearly his entire family in the Holocaust. 


In a formal complaint to Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and state regulators, filed alongside the European Jewish Association, the family argues this isn’t an academic dispute or a legal debate over copyright — it’s the theft and weaponization of a Holocaust survivor’s legacy against his own people.

Lemkin was a committed Zionist who dedicated his life to preventing the annihilation of the Jewish people. The Institute bearing his name, by contrast, moved with stunning speed after the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks to accuse the victim, Israel — the world’s only Jewish state — of genocide in the wake of the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. 

Joseph Lemkin, a relative who has emerged as a leading voice in the fight, described the moment he realized what the organization was doing as both shocking and deeply personal. His teenage son stumbled across the Institute’s social media and brought it to his attention. 

What he found was not a sober, scholarly institution devoted to genocide prevention, but something else entirely: a radical activist platform, saturated with ideological messaging, where the word “genocide” was casually thrown around in a manner that would have horrified the scholar and victim who coined it.

The word “genocide” exists because Lemkin understood that what had been done to the Jewish people during the Holocaust was so unprecedented that existing legal vocabulary could not define it properly. Getty Images

The Institute’s social media is filled with warning of “trans genocide.” If you scroll back to 2023, you’ll discover silence, or worse, equivocation, in the immediate aftermath of the Oct. 7 massacres in Israel. 

On the Institute’s website, merchandising includes political symbols, including Palestinian flag paraphernalia, alongside products with quotes attributed to Lemkin himself.  

Joseph Lemkin told the Post bluntly, “This is not the work of a neutral academic body. It is an agenda-driven operation that has appropriated a name in order to lend its activism moral authority.”

When the word “genocide” is stretched to encompass everything from policy disagreements to social grievances, it does not promote justice — it subverts it.  Bettmann Archive

Rabbi Menachem Margolin, founder and chairman of the European Jewish Association (EJA), the Brussels-based umbrella organization representing Jewish communities across the European continent, joined the legal effort. 

The Institute, he argued, “pretend[s] to be an academic one” while in reality functioning as an activist organization that “spread[s] lies about Israel” and contributes to a broader ecosystem of rising antisemitism, particularly on campuses and social media. 

The legal questions now emerging are significant. Can a nonprofit use the name of a historical figure without authorization, particularly when that usage creates the impression of endorsement? Does the posthumous right of publicity extend to figures like Lemkin, whose legacy carries not just personal but moral significance? And at what point does naming cross the line into misrepresentation?

Nitsana Darshan-Leitner, founder of Shurat HaDin, the Israel Law Center, told the Post, “The organization that has taken his name and now accuses the Jewish state of the very crime he coined to describe our destruction is not honoring his legacy — it is desecrating it.”

Rabbi Menachem Margolin has joined the legal effort with the Lemkin family. NurPhoto via Getty Images

He went further, calling it “antisemitism wearing the costume of human rights,” and warning that “when you let our enemies steal our language, our history and our dead, you make the next attack possible.”

When the word “genocide” is stretched to encompass everything from policy disagreements to social grievances, it does not promote justice — it subverts it. 

The people behind this manipulation are showing exactly who they are. This is not a misunderstanding — it is moral bankruptcy dressed up as activism that we’ve come to expect from activists who are willing to exploit even a Holocaust survivor’s legacy to advance their warped political agenda.

Democratic Sen. John Fetterman, reacted with fury. “Expressly against a family’s wishes, this Philadelphia-based, far-left, pro-Hamas ‘nonprofit’ stole the name of a true giant in actual genocidal studies,” Fetterman told the Post. “We have free speech in America, but you can’t steal a man’s legacy to promote its twisted, antisemitic views.”

The Institute being sued spreads lies about Israel and helps contribute to a growing atmosphere of antisemitism, argues the lawsuit. Getty Images

That distinction — between free speech and false appropriation — is critical. The First Amendment protects the right to say controversial, even offensive things. It does not grant the right to cloak those views in the borrowed authority of someone who cannot consent.

Raphael Lemkin gave the world a word because he believed that naming evil was the first step in stopping it. Today, his family is fighting to ensure that the word — and the name behind it — are not turned into tools for a cause anathema to everything he stood for.


If Lemkin’s name can be hijacked to accuse the Jewish state of committing the very crime he defined to describe Jewish destruction, then we are no longer just debating semantics or history.

We are watching it be rewritten in real time — and turned against the very people it was meant to protect.



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