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Analysis

How Wikipedia is warping the world’s view of Israel

Wikipedia promised that it would democratise knowledge. Now it’s being weaponised against Israel

March 12, 2025 10:42
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Wikipedia has become the new frontier of anti-Israel activism (Getty)
6 min read

From the moment Wikipedia was launched in 2001, it was heralded as neutral territory — a techno-utopia that allowed the public to contribute and participate in the process of knowledge production.

A noble vision, but it was one that was swiftly punctured by reality, at least in part.

First, there was the question of knowledge produced anonymously, cuttingly described by Jaron Lanier in 2006 as “Digital Maoism” — a phenomenon that encourages false authority and suppresses dissenting voices. Then, there was the question of Wikipedia’s gender gap, with its stark minority of women editors and the significant disparity in the number of biographies on women - both emphasising the lack of diversity that hinders the principle of the wisdom of the crowds. Most insidiously, though, the site has become a hotbed of antisemitism, as anti-Israeli editors flocked to the platform. What happened after October 7 therefore, shouldn’t have been a surprise: when Hamas attacked Israel, the group’s online supporters were ready to pounce.

Over the following weeks and months, the fallout became clear. On English Wikipedia, a series of articles were rewritten in a tone that demonised Israel. In a report I submitted to the World Jewish Congress and presented at the United Nations last year, I highlighted how Israel has been vilified and targeted disproportionately, with entries such as “Comparisons between Israel and Nazi Germany”, how article titles were changed — from "massacre" to "attack" — and how Hamas’s acts of terrorism had been sanitised on the platform. It was evident that thousands of articles had been re-edited to demonise and destabilise Israel’s right to exist. At the time, however, I didn’t realise these edits were part of a larger, calculated effort to undermine the country’s right to exist.