"'The Sons of Pigs and Apes' brings Muslim anti-Semitism to the forefront in a convincing manner. It invites people to consider the matter and encourages dialogue among and between social psychologists and others about the dangers of modern anti-Semitism, and for that the discipline should be grateful."—Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology
"Among its attributes, 'The Sons of Pigs and Apes' successfully maintains the issue of Muslim anti-Semitism on the agenda by educating readers about its existence and skillfully disarming the arguments of minimizers and deniers alike."—Matt Abelson, Scholars for Peace in the Middle East
"In this important but disturbing book, Neil Kressel, a social psychologist and expert on extremism in its various forms, documents how Arabs and Muslims speak, write about, and refer to Jews. Why, he asks, does no one question the way the Arab world refers to Jews? Why has almost everyone, from world leaders to the press and even Arabs themselves, been silent about this very public hateful attitude?"—Micah D. Halpern, Jewish Book Council
"A lucid, compelling, and much-needed account of how the crucial issue of antisemitism in the Muslim world is currently being minimized, downplayed, obfuscated, and in many cases completely ignored in much of the Western world. This book should be required reading for decision makers, opinion molders, and not least ‘experts’ in academia, who have been particularly complicit in this policy of silence."—Robert S. Wistrich, director of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism and author of A Lethal Obsession and From Ambivalence to Betrayal
“All religions and cultures suffer from sources that preach hate against the ‘other.’ Throughout history some have, tragically, practiced what their sources preached, while some have sought to dismiss or even counteract the hateful words of their sources. In this book, Neil Kressel shows how extremists within Islam, many in leadership roles, have exploited some of their hateful sources to preach and practice a virulent form of antisemitism. Read this book and judge for yourself.”—Alan M. Dershowitz, author of The Trials of Zion
“While parts of this book make me uncomfortable, I must admit that it represents, rather sadly, what many of my coreligionists think.”—Khaleel Mohammed, Center for Islamic and Arabic Studies, San Diego State University
“Kressel handles one of the hottest topics in the world carefully, calmly, and coolly. He explains the dangers of Muslim antisemitism while destroying the many excuses for it that are so often offered—and shaming those in the Muslim world or in the West who downplay these modern forms of the oldest, and one of the bloodiest, hatreds in world history.”—Elliott Abrams, senior fellow for Middle Eastern Studies, Council on Foreign Relations
“Kressel presents undeniable and yet long-denied information about the pervasive and insidious nature of Islamic antisemitism—and he does so with a pained sensitivity that is both admirable and heartbreaking. Reasonable, patient, and nonemotional, Kressel is antiparanoid and utterly fact-driven.”—Phyllis Chesler, emerita professor of psychology and women’s studies, City University of New York, and author of The New Anti-Semitism