“Eyes On Hate”: A New Exhibition Confronting Holocaust Denial In The Digital Age
TEL AVIV, Israel (April 12, 2026) – As Israel marks Holocaust Remembrance Day, Fighting Online Antisemitism (FOA) has unveiled a groundbreaking digital exhibition designed to dismantle the rising tide of Holocaust distortion. The initiative serves as a direct response to the “infodemic” of antisemitic tropes and historical revisionism currently flooding social media platforms. By transitioning the fight for memory into the digital sphere, FOA aims to provide a definitive shield against the viral spread of fake information.
This exhibition features an archive of more than 800 antisemitic posts, including tropes, incitement to violence, and denial. These examples, which received more than hundreds of thousand views, serve as a primary training tool and a public archive of the various types of antisemitism found online, including Holocaust denial, anti-zionist, supporting terror and incitement to violence. All of the content was removed, by utilizing FOA’s direct escalation channels with the platform (Trusted Flaggers status), the data collected in this section is used to escalate harmful content directly to moderators for removal.
The exhibition’s content was created and collected by more than 300 participants of FOA’s international digital fellowship program, supported by the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany. This hands-on training program has completed seven successful cycles, equipping students and members of the public with the tools to confront hate through informed social media content.
Independent evaluation by the Center for Educational Technology indicated that the training led to a 49% increase in knowledge of online Neo-Nazi propaganda, an 81% increase in recognizing the severity of modern antisemitism, and a 175% increase in knowing how to report antisemitic content. The program’s impact is further reflected in participant sentiment, as 82% felt the training was successful, 86% would recommend it to a friend, and 76% of respondents intend to continue removing antisemitic content online even after the fellowship concludes.
“As a third-generation Holocaust survivor, this initiative is deeply personal for me, especially now as we witness an alarming rise in the deliberate distortion of historical facts regarding our history”, Tomer Aldubi, Executive Director of FOA, stated. “One of our primary goals at FOA is to fight back by providing accurate, data-driven evidence and actively working to remove conspiracy theories and misinformation from the online sphere. In 2025 alone, we reported more than 35,000 antisemitic items across various social media platforms and languages, successfully removing 67% of them”.
About Fighting Online Antisemitism (FOA)
Fighting Online Antisemitism (FOA) is an Israeli-registered non-profit (NGO) serving as the leading digital frontline against antisemitism. Founded in 2020, FOA utilizes a unique combination of global volunteer networks and proprietary monitoring to identify and remove antisemitic content before it escalates into real-world violence.
For more information on our mission and impact, please visit foantisemitism.org.

