Don't forget that he doubled and tripled down before he gave a halfhearted apology.
One of the real problems here is just how many people in the black community revere Farrakhan and embrace his antisemitism, including a large number of notable NBA and NFL players.
Polling shows up to 50% of black people have positive view of Farrakhan (although maybe a quarter to a third of those really know his views beyond the surface level). The relationship between the black and Jewish communities is extremely poor; you need look no further than the recent spate of black anti-Jewish murders and hate crimes in NYC. You'd think with the high prevalence of "anti-fascist" crackdowns in this day and age that people who spew literal Nazi rhetoric about Jewish people (and even make up their own rhetoric on behalf of the Nazis) would be a top target, but apparently kowtowing to BLM's extortionist black lost cause narrative is more important. Prejudice is only bad if it's against some, you see.
It's almost as if Terry Crews is right: you can't simply divide racial groups between the saints and the sinners. You'd think that would be blindingly obvious, but here we stand.