No. A majority of Torah-observant Jews worldwide oppose the Zionist state. Every major Torah authority condemned Zionism from the very beginning; none ever endorsed it.
The Zionist movement has portrayed itself as speaking for all Jews, strategically silencing Torah-held opposition. Most secular media lack the religious literacy to distinguish between Judaism (a 3,000-year-old faith) and Zionism (a 19th-century political movement).
No. We are Torah-observant Jews opposing Zionism on religious and moral grounds. The Satmar Rebbe — the most consequential anti-Zionist voice of the 20th century — was a Holocaust survivor who lost his entire community. Conflating our theological position with hatred of Jews is itself a form of silencing us.
When the Zionist government commits acts of violence or oppression, they do not act in the name of Jews or our sacred Torah values. "Not in our name" is not a slogan; it is a precise theological statement.
Torah Jews is not affiliated with Neturei Karta or any Neturei Karta-identified groups, nor do such groups represent this organization, its leadership, or its mission.
The Satmar Rebbe (1887–1979) — founder of the Satmar Hasidic dynasty and author of Vayoel Moshe, the canonical halachic text opposing Zionism. His voice is the one Torah Jews was founded to carry forward.
The Talmud (Kesubos 111a) records that G-d made the Jewish people swear (1) not to return to Israel as a wall / by force, (2) not to rebel against the nations of the world, and (3) that the nations would not oppress Israel excessively. A state established by force violates the first two.