Racist mass murderer Dylann Roof wants to fire his lawyers — calling them “political and biological enemies” who can’t be trusted — because one is Jewish and the other is Indian.

The convicted Charleston church shooter filed a handwritten request with the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday from death row to have his appointed attorneys replaced on account of their ethnicity, The State newspaper reports.

“My two currently appointed attorneys, Alexandra Yates and Sapna Mirchandani, are Jewish and Indian, respectively. It is therefore quite literally impossible that they and I could have the same interests relating to my case,” Roof explained in his motion.

“Trust is a vital component in an attorney client relationship, and is important to the effectiveness of the defense,” he said. “Because of my political views, which are arguably religious, it will be impossible for me to trust two attorneys that are my political and biological enemies.”

Roof, a self-confessed white nationalist, was sentenced to death earlier this year for the 2015 murders of nine black parishioners at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston.

He claimed to have carried out the cold-blooded killings in an effort to spark a race war.

It is ultimately up to the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals to decide whether Roof should be allowed to switch attorneys for his appeal.

In his motion filed Monday, the 23-year-old also cited previous problems with his federal trial lawyer, David Isaac Bruck, who is Jewish.

“His ethnicity was a constant source of conflict even with my constant efforts to look past it,” Roof said.

During Roof’s trial, Bruck reportedly tried to present evidence of mental illness and possible autism in the attempt to get him a life sentence. This prompted the young man to represent himself.

According to The Post and Courier, Roof at one point told Bruck that he hated him — warning that “if he gets out of jail, he plans to come to [his] house and kill him.”

Yates and Mirchandani were reportedly appointed after Roof’s sentencing in January.