New York City’s far left Mayor Zohran Mamdani has managed to spark outrage once again, this time by publishing an official “immigrant map” that somehow forgot three of the most influential communities to ever shape the city: Italian, Irish, and Jewish Americans.

For a socialist mayor who never misses a chance to call out “colonial erasure,” it is more than a little ironic that his own office is now accused of doing the very thing he claims to oppose.

The controversy began when Mamdani’s administration unveiled a colorful map highlighting immigrant enclaves across the five boroughs.

The list included new progressive activist favorites such as “Little Palestine” and “Little Bhod Tibet.”

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Absent, however, were the classic neighborhoods that have defined New York’s cultural foundation for more than a century.

Italian Americans, whose ancestors arrived by the millions during the Ellis Island era, quickly called foul.

“This is not a clerical error. This is cultural erasure,” declared Mike Crispi, president of the Italian American Civil Rights League.

He reminded the mayor that “Little Italy is sacred ground,” built by immigrants who came with nothing, worked hard, built families, and helped shape modern New York City.

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Crispi’s group is demanding not only a correction to the map but a formal apology from City Hall.

The organization accused Mamdani of pandering to trendy activist causes while ignoring the people whose sweat and sacrifice laid the groundwork for the city’s prosperity.

“Our culture is good enough for their photo ops, our food is good enough for their fundraisers, and our neighborhoods are good enough for tourism dollars,” Crispi said.

“But when it comes time to recognize Italian Americans, they erase us.”

The numbers back up his argument.

Roughly 11.8 percent of New Yorkers today claim Italian ancestry, and between 1880 and 1920 more than four million Italians arrived in New York.

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Their impact runs from construction to cuisine to politics.

Yet Mamdani’s new map ignored Little Italy in Manhattan, Arthur Avenue in the Bronx, Bensonhurst in Brooklyn, Howard Beach in Queens, and most of Staten Island’s southern neighborhoods, all long known for their Italian character.

As if that were not enough, the map also mislabeled Bay Ridge, historically recognized as a working class Irish Italian stronghold, as “Little Palestine.”

That substitution has infuriated not only Italians but also Irish Americans, who have deep roots and long histories in the city.

Around 4.4 percent of residents trace their lineage to Ireland, and places like Woodlawn Heights in the Bronx and the Rockaway peninsula in Queens serve as proud Irish enclaves.

The Jewish community was not spared either.

Brooklyn and Queens include some of the most vibrant Jewish neighborhoods in the entire country, with entire local economies built around synagogues, schools, and kosher businesses.

Approximately 18 percent of Brooklyn households and 10 percent of Queens households have at least one Jewish resident.

Yet none of those areas made the cut on Mamdani’s map.

For Jewish New Yorkers who have spent generations shaping the city’s civic, financial, and educational life, this omission sent a message that Mamdani’s administration sees heritage selectively, rewarding certain groups that match the city’s progressive politics while sidelining those who do not.

It is hard to ignore that Orthodox Jewish voters overwhelmingly supported Donald Trump in 2024, a fact that falls squarely outside the mayor’s leftist bubble.

Mamdani’s office declined to comment, which only fed the sense that the omission was intentional.

Critics see it as part of a larger pattern within progressive politics, where the talk of “diversity” often means highlighting any culture except the ones that built the cities and sustained the economy in the first place.

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The backlash also hints at a growing frustration among many ethnic communities who feel sidelined by New York’s far left leadership.

Italian, Irish, and Jewish neighborhoods once formed the cultural engine of the city.

Today, they are treated as politically inconvenient relics.

The city that once prided itself on being a melting pot seems to have narrowed its definition of who counts as a “real” immigrant.

Mamdani’s supporters might argue that the map focuses on more recent immigrant arrivals, but that excuse collapses under even minimal scrutiny.

A mayor who constantly celebrates identity politics should have the basic awareness to include the very cultures that made America’s greatest immigrant city possible.

The Italian American Civil Rights League, originally founded by Joseph Colombo in 1970, is renewing its mission to “combat anti Italian bias wherever it appears.”

Their renewed activism shows that many New Yorkers are not about to let City Hall rewrite their city’s story to fit a fashionable narrative.

The outcry over Mamdani’s map may seem symbolic, but it reflects something deeper.

New York’s progressive leaders appear eager to erase the cultural legacy of hard working immigrant families who built this city simply because they do not fit the modern leftist mold.

The families of Little Italy, Irish Woodlawn, and Jewish Borough Park deserve better than to be edited out of history by a mayor who believes his political agenda matters more than the truth of New York’s past.

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