Ye Apologizes For Past Antisemitic Remarks In The Wall Street Journal

TOPSHOT – US rapper and producer Kanye West gestures upon arriving at Shanghai Pudong International Airport on July 11, 2025. Kanye West will hold a concert in Shanghai on July 12. (Photo by Hector RETAMAL / AFP) (Photo by HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP via Getty Images)

Ye, formerly Kanye West, seeks forgiveness for his past antisemitic remarks in an open letter published as an advertisement in the latest issue of the Wall Street Journal.

Published on Monday morning (Jan. 26), the mogul published a lengthy letter titled “To Those I’ve Hurt,” offering his most expansive apology yet for the antisemitic remarks and behavior that derailed his career and reputation over the past several years.

In the letter, Ye frames his public unraveling through the lens of long-term brain trauma and untreated mental illness. He traces the beginning of his struggles back to a near-fatal car accident 25 years ago that “broke my jaw and caused injury to the right frontal lobe of my brain.”

While the physical damage was obvious, Ye says “the deeper injury, the one inside my skull, went unnoticed,” setting off decades of undiagnosed neurological damage before he was formally diagnosed with bipolar type-1 disorder in 2023.

Describing the condition, he continues: “When you’re manic, you don’t think you’re sick… you feel like you’re seeing the world more clearly than ever, when in reality you’re losing your grip entirely.”

Ye (Kanye West) Says Sorry For His Antisemitic Remarks in a letter to the Wall Street Journal, blaming it on the 2002 Accident

He pushed back against public jokes about his behavior, stressing that bipolar disorder is “a very serious debilitating disease you can die from,” citing studies that show sufferers face a “life expectancy that is shortened by ten to fifteen years on average.”

The most sobering moment of the letter comes when Ye addresses his embrace of Nazi imagery during past manic episodes. “I lost touch with reality,” he admitted, revealing that he gravitated toward “the most destructive symbol I could find, the swastika,” even going as far as selling T-shirts bearing it.

“I regret and am deeply mortified by my actions in that state,” he wrote, while making clear, “It does not excuse what I did.”

Ye flatly rejected extremist ideology, stating, “I am not a Nazi or an antisemite. I love Jewish people.”

He also issued a direct apology to Black audiences, writing, “The black community is, unquestionably, the foundation of who I am. I am so sorry to have let you down.”

Reflecting on a four-month manic episode in early 2025 that he said “destroyed my life,” Ye credited his wife for pushing him toward treatment.

Now stabilized through “medication, therapy, exercise, and clean living,” he acknowledged the power of his voice, admitting, “My words as a leader in my community have global impact and influence.”

Ye closed the letter without asking for a free pass, instead requesting “patience and understanding as I find my way home,” signaling a cautious reset from one of hip-hop’s most polarizing figures.


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