The Atlantic

The Conspiracy Theory to Rule Them All

What explains the strange, long life of <em>The Protocols of the Elders of Zion</em>?
Source: Tereza Zelenkova

Photography by Tereza Zelenkova

T most consequential conspiracy text was barely noticed when it first appeared in a little-read Russian newspaper in 1903. The message of is straightforward, and terrifying: The rise of liberalism had provided Jews with the tools to destroy institutions—the nobility, the church, the sanctity of marriage—whole. Soon, they would take control of the world, as part of a revenge plot dating back to the ascendancy of Christendom. The text, ostensibly narrated by a Jewish leader, describes this plan in detail, relying on centuries-old anti-Jewish tropes, and including lengthy expositions on monetary, media, and electoral manipulation. It announces Jewry’s triumph as imminent: The world order will fall into the hands of a cunning elite, who have schemed forever and are now fated to rule until

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