Friday 29 May 2026 13:05
Rome Pride Excludes Jewish LGBTQ Group
Rome Pride Excludes Jewish LGBTQ Group, Igniting Accusations of AntisemitismKeshet Italia Has Been Barred From the 20 June Parade for Refusing a Political Test on Israel. The Decision Has Split the Movement.Rome Pride has excluded Keshet Italia, the association representing Jewish LGBTQIA+ people, from its 20 June parade, triggering a fierce controversy that has drawn in the Jewish community, the city government and figures across the political spectrum, and raised painful questions about whether an event founded on inclusion has betrayed its own principles.
What Happened
The decision was communicated by organisers on social media following a meeting with representatives of Keshet Italia and Keshet Europe. According to Rome Pride, Keshet Italia bore "the responsibility of not having taken, and not intending to take, distance from the ongoing genocide in Gaza." On this basis, organisers concluded that "there are no conditions for the participation of their float in the Parade," while adding that "Pride is an open and free demonstration." The result is that there will be no Jewish LGBTQIA+ float in the parade.
Keshet's Response
Keshet Italia responded with a furious statement, accusing organisers of having established a discriminatory "political exam" and applying an intolerable double standard. "They accuse us of not having distanced ourselves from the Israeli government. It is false and it is a dangerous double standard," the association said. "Italian Jewish people are being asked to distance themselves from a foreign government for which we are not responsible. We are always back to asking the Jew to dissociate, to repent."
The association said Rome Pride had "thrown off the mask" and, "with an act of unprecedented exclusion," had first denied it access to the organising coordination and then even the possibility of parading with its own float. "Our fault? Being Jewish," the statement read. "We do not accept lessons in rights from those who apply dynamics of identity-based exclusion. Antisemitism masked as political positioning remains antisemitism." Keshet called for a clear position from Rome mayor Roberto Gualtieri and the city government.
The Context of 2025
The exclusion does not come out of nowhere. During Pride events in 2025, the Star of David became a target: Keshet reported insults, Nazi salutes, gun gestures, objects thrown and floats blocked. The association had requested a float in part for security reasons, following systematic aggressions. The 2026 decision means that a group seeking protection after being attacked the previous year has instead been removed from the event entirely.
The Reaction
The response from the Jewish community and across politics was swift and largely condemnatory. The Union of Italian Jewish Communities, UCEI, said that demanding certificates of legitimacy or prior adherence to specific readings of international geopolitical contexts in order to parade means betraying the history of the LGBTQIA+ movement. "No one should be required to pass an ideological test to participate in a space created with the goal of including. Prides were born to include, not to exclude," the community's statement read.
The criticism crossed traditional political lines. Senator Ivan Scalfarotto highlighted what he called the antisemitic mechanism at the heart of the decision: "They say they are judging them for what they have not said. But demanding from Jews a public distancing as proof of admission is not judging what they do: it is demanding from them one of the many proofs of loyalty that have always been asked of Jews. It is the oldest of antisemitic mechanisms." He also pointed to a paradox: "Israel is the only country in the Middle East where homosexuality is not persecuted."
Former Democratic Party MP Anna Paola Concia was equally direct: "Gay Jews are being excluded as such. Pride has betrayed its nature, which was to defend the rights of everyone in any part of the world regardless of religion and ethnicity." She described the double standard as a madness that would make the founders of the early civil rights struggles, many of them Jewish, turn in their graves.
The Organisers' Defence
Organisers have attempted to separate the political from the identity dimension, specifying that they do not intend to target the Jewish community as such. But the distinction has not been sufficient to avoid the exclusion of the float itself. The fundamental criticism, articulated by Keshet, UCEI and figures across the spectrum, is that requiring Italian Jewish citizens to publicly disavow the actions of a foreign government as a condition of participation is itself a discriminatory act, regardless of how organisers frame it.
What Comes Next
The organisational machinery of the event continues. The inaugural Gran Galà of the Pride Croisette, the cultural village marking its tenth anniversary with a record 24 consecutive days of programming, was scheduled at the Terme di Caracalla on 28 May. The parade itself takes place on 20 June.
The pressure on Rome Pride to reverse its decision is considerable, and the controversy has placed the city government in an uncomfortable position, with calls for both UNAR, the national anti-discrimination office, and Roma Capitale to examine whether the exclusion constitutes discrimination against Jewish citizens. Whether the organisers reconsider before 20 June remains to be seen. For now, an event built on the principle that people should be free to be who they are, regardless of any other consideration, has told one group that who they are is not enough.
Ph: GIO_LE / Shutterstock.com
#news #civil rights
read the news on Wanted in Rome - News in Italy - Rome's local English news
Keshet Italia Has Been Barred From the 20 June Parade for Refusing a Political Test on Israel. The Decision Has Split the Movement.
Rome Pride has excluded Keshet Italia, the association representing Jewish LGBTQIA+ people, from its 20 June parade, triggering a fierce controversy that has drawn in the Jewish community, the city government and figures across the political spectrum, and raised painful questions about whether an event founded on inclusion has betrayed its own principles.
The decision was communicated by organisers on social media following a meeting with representatives of Keshet Italia and Keshet Europe. According to Rome Pride, Keshet Italia bore "the responsibility of not having taken, and not intending to take, distance from the ongoing genocide in Gaza." On this basis, organisers concluded that "there are no conditions for the participation of their float in the Parade," while adding that "Pride is an open and free demonstration." The result is that there will be no Jewish LGBTQIA+ float in the parade.
Keshet Italia responded with a furious statement, accusing organisers of having established a discriminatory "political exam" and applying an intolerable double standard. "They accuse us of not having distanced ourselves from the Israeli government. It is false and it is a dangerous double standard," the association said. "Italian Jewish people are being asked to distance themselves from a foreign government for which we are not responsible. We are always back to asking the Jew to dissociate, to repent."
The association said Rome Pride had "thrown off the mask" and, "with an act of unprecedented exclusion," had first denied it access to the organising coordination and then even the possibility of parading with its own float. "Our fault? Being Jewish," the statement read. "We do not accept lessons in rights from those who apply dynamics of identity-based exclusion. Antisemitism masked as political positioning remains antisemitism." Keshet called for a clear position from Rome mayor Roberto Gualtieri and the city government.
The exclusion does not come out of nowhere. During Pride events in 2025, the Star of David became a target: Keshet reported insults, Nazi salutes, gun gestures, objects thrown and floats blocked. The association had requested a float in part for security reasons, following systematic aggressions. The 2026 decision means that a group seeking protection after being attacked the previous year has instead been removed from the event entirely.
The response from the Jewish community and across politics was swift and largely condemnatory. The Union of Italian Jewish Communities, UCEI, said that demanding certificates of legitimacy or prior adherence to specific readings of international geopolitical contexts in order to parade means betraying the history of the LGBTQIA+ movement. "No one should be required to pass an ideological test to participate in a space created with the goal of including. Prides were born to include, not to exclude," the community's statement read.
The criticism crossed traditional political lines. Senator Ivan Scalfarotto highlighted what he called the antisemitic mechanism at the heart of the decision: "They say they are judging them for what they have not said. But demanding from Jews a public distancing as proof of admission is not judging what they do: it is demanding from them one of the many proofs of loyalty that have always been asked of Jews. It is the oldest of antisemitic mechanisms." He also pointed to a paradox: "Israel is the only country in the Middle East where homosexuality is not persecuted."
Former Democratic Party MP Anna Paola Concia was equally direct: "Gay Jews are being excluded as such. Pride has betrayed its nature, which was to defend the rights of everyone in any part of the world regardless of religion and ethnicity." She described the double standard as a madness that would make the founders of the early civil rights struggles, many of them Jewish, turn in their graves.
Organisers have attempted to separate the political from the identity dimension, specifying that they do not intend to target the Jewish community as such. But the distinction has not been sufficient to avoid the exclusion of the float itself. The fundamental criticism, articulated by Keshet, UCEI and figures across the spectrum, is that requiring Italian Jewish citizens to publicly disavow the actions of a foreign government as a condition of participation is itself a discriminatory act, regardless of how organisers frame it.
The organisational machinery of the event continues. The inaugural Gran Galà of the Pride Croisette, the cultural village marking its tenth anniversary with a record 24 consecutive days of programming, was scheduled at the Terme di Caracalla on 28 May. The parade itself takes place on 20 June.
The pressure on Rome Pride to reverse its decision is considerable, and the controversy has placed the city government in an uncomfortable position, with calls for both UNAR, the national anti-discrimination office, and Roma Capitale to examine whether the exclusion constitutes discrimination against Jewish citizens. Whether the organisers reconsider before 20 June remains to be seen. For now, an event built on the principle that people should be free to be who they are, regardless of any other consideration, has told one group that who they are is not enough.
Ph: GIO_LE / Shutterstock.com
