Mamdani’s Map Is a Death Warrant for New York Jews
I’m not about fear mongering but about helping people wake up to reality, and focus on the positive…
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s administration recently released (and promoted) an official “New York City Immigrant Enclaves” map as part of a Neighborhood Passport tourism initiative tied to the World Cup.
The colorful graphic spotlights thirty neighborhoods representing the city’s “thriving international communities,” proudly labeling places such as “Little Palestine” in Bay Ridge, “Little Egypt” in Astoria, “Little Pakistan,” and multiple Chinatowns. Yet it conspicuously erases iconic Jewish neighborhoods, omits Little Italy, skips Irish enclaves, and ignores other historic communities that helped build New York.
The resulting scandal ignited widespread outrage: critics rightly saw it as a deliberate rewriting of the city’s immigrant story, one that elevates certain groups while airbrushing Jews and others out of the picture.
Zohran Mamdani isn’t hiding anything. His map doesn’t shock because it lies, it shocks because it tells the truth about the direction he proudly wants to take New York City. This is the vision of a city transformed, following the path already visible in Paris and London: neighborhoods shifting into parallel societies, priorities changing, and a growing demographic reality reshaping daily life, complete with emerging no-go zones where police tread lightly and Muslim community patrols enforcing elements of Sharia law on the streets.
In France, entire banlieues around Paris such as Seine-Saint-Denis have become notorious no-go areas plagued by high crime, car burnings, and Islamist influence, where emergency services often require police escorts and secular values are openly rejected.
In Sweden, districts in Malmö and parts of Stockholm have seen similar transformations, with reports of Sharia patrols harassing locals, “morality police” targeting women and “infidels,” and a surge in Jew-hating antisemitic attacks that have driven many Jews to emigrate.
London’s Tower Hamlets and other enclaves have witnessed “Sharia zones” with street signs, vigilante enforcement against alcohol, gambling, and Western dress, and grooming gang scandals that authorities long downplayed.
It represents the crowning achievement of the red-green alliance, that unholy convergence of radical leftism and jihadi expansionism, openly advancing its goals in the heart of America’s greatest city.
The real problem is not Mamdani’s transparency, with this map. It is that too many Jews and freedom-loving New Yorkers still refuse to internalize the magnitude of what this means.
I have spoken with Australian Jews who describe an increasingly untenable situation. Families that once felt secure now talk openly about leaving Australia because daily life is eroded by rising Jew-hatred, fueled by a rapidly growing Muslim population and the cultural shifts that accompany it. The same conversations echo in Toronto, where Jewish communities watch with alarm as Jew-hating antisemitic incidents surge and the social fabric frays. These are not abstract fears or isolated events. They are patterns repeating across Western cities that failed to confront demographic and ideological realities in time.
New York Jews must wake up before the same story takes root here. Until Western nations summon the will to deport jihadis and those who actively promote Sharia law, these countries will continue to decline and become more dangerous to Jews and non-Jews alike.
Mamdani is not the disease; he is a symptom and a willing accelerator. The deeper issue is the willful blindness to what unchecked immigration from Muslim-majority societies has already wrought in Europe and is beginning to produce in North America.
Back in 1997, I wrote a letter to the editor of The Jewish Week in New York. The paper had published a glowing article praising Jewish organizations for helping Muslim immigrants acclimate to American life. In my letter, I warned that these same organizations were ignoring the warning signs already evident in Western Europe. Muslim immigration, combined with the jihad at the core of Islam, was transforming European cities in ways that threatened Jewish safety and Western freedoms. Jewish organizations ignoring the threat of a jihadi population, I argued, was suicidal.
The response? The paper refused to print my letter. Yet the years since have proven the point with brutal clarity. Jihad is not merely terrorism, it is a comprehensive doctrine of conquest and submission, rooted in the example of Muhammad, aimed at bringing the entire world under Islamic rule and subordinating or persecuting non-Muslims. Anyone who studies Islamic texts, history, and the consistent patterns in Christian countries where Muslims become majorities (Egypt, Iraq, Turkey, Lebanon to name only a few!) understands this is not “Islamophobia.” It is pattern recognition.
Jewish organizations that prioritized universalist goodwill over the survival of their own communities dug the grave of American Jewish security. The same misplaced compassion that looked away from Europe’s unfolding crisis now endangers New York.
But I never end in despair.
The future for the Jewish people is bright, in Israel.
The Jewish state stands as a thriving, innovative, resilient homeland that has turned every challenge into strength. Jews belong there not as refugees fleeing the latest wave of antisemitism, but as people returning home because it is home. Aliyah should be a positive choice: building, creating, and living freely as Jews among Jews in the one place on Earth where our ancient people exercise sovereignty and self-defense as a matter of right, not exception.
New Yorkers, Jews and all who cherish freedom, still have time to reject the Mamdani vision. Recognize the map for what it is: a warning, not a destiny. Ignore reality at our peril. The choice is ours.
Strengthen your faith in God. Good times are coming for the Jewish people, in Israel.
Am Yisrael Chai!!!

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