A Danish fashion website is using graphic apparel to peddle hate. The online retailer Netwalker13 has launched a clothing line that openly promotes anti-Israel propaganda and glorifies Hamas terrorism.
The collection includes t-shirts and sweatshirts emblazoned with slogans such as “Zionists Are Not Welcome Here,“ “Anti-Zionist Social Club,” “F**k Off Zionists,” “Free Palestine,” “By Any Means Necessary,” and “Resistance is the Deepest Form of Love.”
Designs include shirts featuring the masked face of Hamas spokesperson Abu Obaida superimposed over a map of Israel — a direct visual rejection of Israel’s existence. Another displays the inverted red triangle, a symbol of hate and intimidation that has been widely used to mark Jews and Israelis for harassment and targeting.
If the slogans incite, the descriptions affirm — unapologetically and in plain language. The “1987” sweatshirt is marketed for “those who train with purpose and rebel with pride,” featuring phrases in both English and Arabic, such as “Global Intifada,” “Resist, Fight, Boycott,” and “From tha river to tha streets” — a stylized version of the antisemitic slogan “From the river to the sea,” long recognized as a call for the destruction of Israel.
The “Anti-Zionist Social Club” sweatshirt is described as a “middle finger to Zionism,” punctuated by the slogan “F**k Zionists.” A “Free Palestine” T-shirt with the masked face of Abu Obaida and an inverted red triangle is promoted as “loud, bold, and straight-up disrespectful to the occupy” (a slang term referring to the so-called “occupation”), with the brand mocking Jewish users for reporting it online: “Joke’s on them — we look even better under pressure.”
Other items, like the “Risen From Rubble” hoodie, openly romanticize armed struggle, featuring a Palestinian “freedom fighter” and a declaration that “Intifada lives in every step we take, every stone we throw.” The “Crush Them” sweatshirt is perhaps the most brazen, bearing Arabic calligraphy reading “O Allah, crush them,” accompanied by the slogan: “Their audacity will be crushed on the rock of glory in Gaza.”
Prices start around $32, but shipping to Israel is higher. The site frames this surcharge as a form of resistance, stating that it “refuses to sell to Zionists.”
Promoting terrorist figures and antisemitic slogans may also violate Danish law. Under Section 266b of Denmark’s Penal Code, it is illegal to promote hate speech or glorify terrorism. By selling merchandise that praises Hamas and incites violence, Netwalker13 appears to be operating outside the bounds of protected expression — though Danish authorities have yet to take public enforcement action. The site’s operators remain anonymous, a common tactic among platforms seeking to avoid accountability while spreading radical content globally.
Netwalker13’s emergence is part of a broader and deeply troubling trend: the mainstreaming of extremist ideology in pop culture. Slogans like “F**k Off Zionists” and “Anti-Zionist Social Club” rebrand antisemitic hatred as a badge of defiance; “Globalize the Intifada” and “By Any Means Necessary” glorify violence against Israel and Jews worldwide; and “Resistance is the Deepest Form of Love” romanticizes terrorism and rebrands it as activism.
Meanwhile, the slogan “Free Palestine” has become a rallying cry for violence against Jews and Israelis — including the deadly attacks in Washington, D.C., and Boulder, Colorado, in recent months. Once confined to the fringes, these slogans are now emblazoned on sweatshirts, echoed on festival stages, and shouted during violent demonstrations.
In just the past few weeks, a synagogue and Israeli-owned restaurant in Melbourne, Australia were violently attacked, and “Death to the IDF” was chanted before thousands at the UK’s Glastonbury Festival. These are not protests — they are a normalization of antisemitic rhetoric and pro-terror messaging across public and digital spaces alike.