World
Ye apologises for his antisemitism in Wall Street Journal advert: ‘I lost touch with reality’
JTA – Ye has again issued a formal apology for his recent years of antisemitic tirades, taking out a full-page advert in the Wall Street Journal in which he attributed his actions to his prior health conditions.
“I lost touch with reality,” the rapper and fashion mogul formerly known as Kanye West writes in the advert. Later, he added, “I am not a Nazi or an antisemite. I love Jewish people.”
Ye has repeatedly alienated the global Jewish community and broad swaths of his fanbase since autumn 2022, when he first threatened to go “death con 3 on Jewish people”. Last year, he bought a Super Bowl advert to promote t-shirts with swastikas on them, then released a song titled Heil Hitler, which a group of far-right antisemitic influencers including Nick Fuentes recently played at a Miami nightclub in a viral incident.
The Journal advert marks the latest in a series of apologies for Ye, which included a May 2025 declaration that he was “done with antisemitism”, and apologising in-person to an Orthodox rabbi in November.
In the advert, Ye writes that he experienced head trauma from a car accident 25 years ago that went undiagnosed until 2023, which “caused serious damage to my mental health and led to my bipolar type-1 diagnosis”. He has been open about his bipolar disorder for years.
“In that fractured state, I gravitated toward the most destructive symbol I could find, the swastika, and even sold t-shirts bearing it,” Ye writes. He describes “disconnected moments” and “reckless behaviour” stemming from his disorder, while noting, “It does not excuse what I did, though.”
Ye also apologised “to the black community – which held me down through all of the highs and lows and the darkest of times”. After his open embrace of Nazism, which had followed his promoting of the phrase “White lives matter”, many of Ye’s former allies and collaborators in the black community abandoned him. His music remains popular on social media and underscores many Instagram posts and other user-generated content.
He said he was embarking on an “effective regime of medication; therapy; exercise; and clean living”, concluding, “I’m not asking for sympathy or a free pass, though I aspire to earn your forgiveness. I write today simply to ask for your patience and understanding as I find my way home.”
Ye’s normally active social media accounts, where he has shared antisemitic language and imagery in the past, were quiet on Monday morning after the apology advert ran.
Ye has maintained an active performance schedule. This week, he is scheduled to play two high-profile concerts in Mexico City.
Even amid his recent apologies, Ye’s record of antisemitism continues to motivate popular antisemitic influencers. In recent days, Candace Owens, a far-right pundit and antisemitic conspiracy theorist whose own collaborations with Ye directly precipitated his public antisemitism, had returned to sharing some of Ye’s initial antisemitic tweets with her followers.
“This tweet is a whole vibe,” she wrote about his “death con 3” tweet. Owens has been promoting allegations that Israel was involved in Charlie Kirk’s assassination.




julian
January 27, 2026 at 4:33 pm
Ye apologies are worth nothing as he is a patent anti semite and will not change.
His simple philosophy is that if you apologize it all goes away…its not that easy