Calls to "Destroy Israel" Open Spain's Bull-Running Festival in Shocking Display
Anti-Israel activists hijack the iconic San Fermín festival in Pamplona, launching a rocket-shaped flare while chanting genocidal slogans. Israeli and European Jewish leaders condemn the display as modern blood libel.

The opening ceremony of Spain’s world-renowned San Fermín festival in Pamplona took a disturbing turn this weekend when anti-Israel activists were invited to lead the official launch. The ceremony — traditionally marked by fireworks and celebration — was marred by chants of “Free Palestine” and “Destroy Israel,” igniting outrage across Jewish and diplomatic communities.
Wearing keffiyehs, members of the radical group Yala Nafarroa con Palestina lit a rocket-shaped flare symbolizing the start of the bull-running festivities. Standing atop the city hall balcony, activist Laidon Soriano shouted into the microphone: “Long live Free Palestine!” Her words were followed by a staged performance below, where activists unfurled a massive banner reading “Destroy Israel” amid a human formation in the shape of Israel’s map.
Some participants in the square waved red handkerchiefs — a traditional San Fermín symbol — altered to display the borders of Israel labeled as “Palestine.”
The grotesque display drew immediate backlash. Israel’s embassy in Spain issued a scathing condemnation, calling the event “an obsession with the Jewish state and a disgrace.” “It is intolerable that Spanish institutions support individuals or groups whose only goal is to incite hatred against Israel,” the statement read. “When public institutions legitimize this obsession with the Jewish state, they fuel rising antisemitism across Europe.”
In contrast, Pamplona’s mayor Joseba Asiron, who invited the group, said he was “proud” of the message of “solidarity, rationality, and humanity” sent by the activists — a remark critics described as willful blindness to incitement and hate speech.
Javier Negre, a prominent Spanish journalist and founder of EDATV, wrote on X: “It pains me to see Pamplona governed by sympathizers of ETA and Hamas. Watching the start of San Fermín this year makes me sick.”
Rabbi Menachem Margolin, head of the European Jewish Association, called the spectacle “the latest blood libel dressed up as a cultural event.” He added, “To inject genocide accusations and ‘Destroy Israel’ banners into a public celebration is not just offensive — it’s dangerous.”
Originally intended to shepherd bulls through Pamplona’s streets, the San Fermín run has become one of Europe’s most iconic folk traditions. But this year, for many, it became a symbol of something much darker: the normalization of hate.
Rabbi Margolin concluded with a piercing question: “What does Palestine have to do with bull-running? Nothing — except hate.”