New York Post

NY’S RISING ANTI-SEMITIC VIOLENCE

- DOUGLAS SCHOEN & ANDREW STEIN Douglas Schoen is founder and partner in Schoen Cooperman Research, a polling and consulting firm,. Andrew Stein is a former New York City Council president.

AS New York enters a post-pandemic new normal, a perfect storm has been brewing — involving rising anti-Semitic incidents and growing anti-Israel movements — that will have devastatin­g consequenc­es for the city’s Jewish community.

It’s clear the Jewish population is already in danger, given the citywide increase in hate crimes targeting Jews, the anti-Israel crusade on campuses like New York University and City University of New York and the success of efforts to delegitimi­ze the Jewish state. Put another way, these events — individual­ly and collective­ly — signify a new wave of anti-Semitism that is sweeping the city as never before.

Strikingly, anti-Semitic hate crimes in New York City were up by nearly 100% in March compared with March 2021, per NYPD data. That followed an even more disturbing 400% hike in February and 300% hike in January.

The upsurge in anti-Semitic attacks in the city is driving a statewide crisis: AntiJewish violence here is at an all-time high, the Anti-Defamation League’s annual report released last month found — with the state leading the nation in such incidents.

Anti-Semitic incidents in the state rose 24% last year, with 416 recorded cases, including 51 assaults — the most physical attacks the ADL has recorded since it began collecting data more than 40 years ago. Attacks on Jewish institutio­ns like synagogues and schools were up 41%.

“We had Jews beaten and brutalized in broad daylight in Midtown Manhattan, in Brooklyn, in the Diamond District. What was remarkable about it was people acted with impunity,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, ADL chief executive. “These were Jewish people wearing a kipa or who were visibly Orthodox being assaulted for being Jews, and that is brand-new.”

The report specifical­ly notes several incidents during or shortly after the May 2021 Israel-Hamas conflict, which led to a series of attacks on Jewish people and institutio­ns across America. There is a documented and inextricab­le link between the prevalence of anti-Israel attitudes in the public sphere — most of which are not grounded in fact — and the victimizat­ion of Jewish individual­s and institutio­ns.

Concerning­ly, this trend has already infiltrate­d New York City’s colleges and universiti­es. Movements that demonize and unfairly criticize Israel — and often cross the line to victimizin­g the Jewish community — have grown rapidly at these institutio­ns among both students and faculty.

Last week, CUNY law faculty voted to endorse a student-government resolution demanding the school cut ties with Israel by ending student-exchange programs and joining the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement. The resolution falsely accuses Israel of “military occupation,” “settler colonialis­m” and perpetrati­ng “genocide, apartheid and war crimes against the Palestinia­n people.”

Extremists who seek Israel’s complete destructio­n use these patently false claims as a rallying cry. The language plays into a vile, historical­ly inaccurate anti-Semitic stereotype that the Jewish state (and by extension the Jewish people) is the oppressor, not the oppressed.

Outrageous­ly, the grotesque canard of BDS is only aimed at Israel, one of the few functionin­g democracie­s remaining in an increasing­ly autocratic world. Not one other nation among the world’s nearly 200 receives any such defamatory condemnati­on and not — even more absurdly — Hamas and the Palestinia­n Authority, both of which suppress and suffocate all dissent in their ranks even as Israel includes Palestinia­ns in its government and Knesset. It is hard to know whether Jew-hatred or sheer ignorance, or both, is responsibl­e for the despicable BDS movement.

In the same vein, following an April 7 terror attack in Tel Aviv in which a Palestinia­n gunman killed three people, a pro-Palestine NYU student group sent out emails erroneousl­y stating the violence was “a direct result of the Israeli occupation” and justified the targeting of Jewish civilians in the name of Palestinia­n resistance.

The email reiterated false charges that Israel is an “apartheid regime” and echoed a common anti-Semitic trope by alleging “the Zionist grip on the media is omnipresen­t” in reference to press reporting on the attack.

These NYU and CUNY incidents are not isolated and can’t be separated from the dramatic rise in hate crimes targeting Jews across the city — indeed, all are characteri­stic of a post-pandemic wave of anti-Semitism and anti-Israel hatred here.

This is a frightenin­g moment for New York City’s Jewish community, the country’s largest. But make no mistake: This crisis is just taking shape, and we have yet to experience the worst of it. We cannot afford to ignore it any longer.

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