Kanye West makes groveling apology to NYC rabbi, blames bipolar disorder, after years of antisemitic tirades

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Rapper Kanye West — who released a song praising Adolf Hitler earlier this year — made a groveling apology to a New York City rabbi and said he is taking “accountability” for his bizarre antisemitic streak, which he blamed on mental illness.

West, who now goes by Ye, told Rabbi Yoshiyahu Yosef Pinto on Tuesday he had “profound remorse” for his laundry list of antisemitic remarks that triggered global outrage and cost him major business partnerships, video shared on social media shows.

“I feel really blessed to be able to sit here with you today and just take accountability,” West told the rabbi. “I was dealing with some various issues of bipolar, so it would take the ideas I had and have me take them to an extreme where I would forget about the protection of the people around me or and myself.

Rapper Kanye West meets with New York City Rabbi Yoshiyahu Yosef Pinto. X / @Akademiks
Rapper Kanye West apologized to NYC Rabbi Yoshiyahu Yosef Pinto. X / @Akademiks

“So I wanted to come and take accountability… Sometimes people aren’t that knowledgeable about bipolar and the cause, or what causes it, and the way you act when you have this disease,” he added.

Pinto, through a translator, called West a “very good man” and hugged the rapper, the clip shows.

“A person is not defined by his mistakes, but by the way he chooses to correct them,” Pinto said in a statement online. “This is the true strength of man: The ability to return, to learn, and to build bridges of love and peace.”

Ye’s public controversial statements began in 2022 when he threatened to go “death con 3 on Jewish people” on social media, followed by a series of strange interviews in which he praised Hitler and spouted conspiracy claims about Jews controlling US media and finance.

Kanye West embraces Rabbi Yoshiyahu Yosef Pinto. X / @Akademiks

Ye’s antisemitic posts and comments continued in subsequent years, and he often downplayed the Holocaust.

He bafflingly released a song titled “Heil Hitler” in May 2025 and sold T-shirts blaring huge swastikas on the front.

Just two weeks after the song’s release, he claimed he was “done with antisemitism.”

“I love all people. God forgive me for the pain I’ve caused. I forgive those who have caused me pain. Thank you God,” he said at the time.

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