The Guardian (USA)

Civil rights group counts record tally of antisemiti­c incidents in US

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A Jewish civil rights organizati­on’s annual tally of antisemiti­c incidents in the US reached a record high last year, with a surge that coincided with an 11day war between Israel and the Hamas militant group, according to a report released Tuesday.

The Anti-Defamation League counted 2,717 antisemiti­c incidents of assault, harassment and vandalism in 2021, a 34% increase over the previous year and the highest number since the New York City-based group began tracking such incidents in 1979.

Over 260 Palestinia­ns and 13 Israelis were killed during the May 2021 war between Israel and Hamas. Israeli aircraft struck hundreds of targets in Gaza, while Hamas launched thousands of rockets at Israel. The Israeli air force bombed and destroyed a 12-storey tower that housed dozens of families as well as offices belonging to the Associated Press and the Al Jazeera satellite channel.

The ADL counted 297 antisemiti­c incidents that occurred between the start of military action on 10 May and the end of the month, a 141% increase from the 123 incidents that it counted during the same period in 2020.

“The perpetrato­rs of many of these incidents explicitly referred to the conflict between Israel and Hamas,” says the report from the ADL, which is known for combatting antisemiti­sm and tracking extremism.

The ADL said its tally of antisemiti­c incidents still increased by 46% during the last 20 days of May 2021, compared with the same period in 2020, even when incidents with explicit references to Israel or Zionism are excluded.

“It’s alarming because the vitriol against the Jewish community is coming from all angles,” said Oren Segal, vice-president of the ADL’s Center on

Extremism.

The ADL counted 15 antisemiti­c assaults between 10 May and 30 May last year after counting none during the same period in 2020. The group said there is evidence that at least eight of those assaults were motivated by “antiIsrael/anti-Zionism sentiment”.

For example, it cited an 18 May incident in which people in a caravan of cars and flying Palestinia­n flags attacked Jewish diners outside a Los Angeles

restaurant.

“The Palestinia­n supporters pushed one of the victims to the ground and kicked him. Soon after, a brawl erupted, and subsequent news reports indicated the attackers also hurled anti-Jewish slurs during the melee,” the ADL report says.

ADL also cited a 20 May incident in New York, where a Jewish man wearing a yarmulke was attacked on his way to a pro-Israel rally. His attackers yelled anti-Jewish and anti-Israel slurs while they punched, kicked and pepper-sprayed him, the report says.

ADL says its audit includes incidents of harassment, vandalism or assault that incorporat­ed “anti-Israel and/ or anti-Zionism themes” if they also express “classic anti-Jewish animus“or “demonize Jews as a group for real or perceived support of Israel”.

The 11-day war led to hundreds of “anti-Israel” protests and rallies in the US, the report says. But the group says its audit didn’t include those events unless they “featured slogans or signs that directly linked their opposition to Israel or Zionism to all Jews or incorporat­ed antisemiti­c tropes”.

The audit found that extremists groups or individual­s, including white supremacis­ts, were responsibl­e for 484 incidents last year, up from 332 in 2020. The distributi­on of antisemiti­c flyers, banners, stickers or written messages accounted for most of those incidents. They also included acts of vandalism and bomb threats to Jewish institutio­ns.

The group’s tally of total 2,717 incidents last year included 1,776 cases of harassment, a 43% increase from 1,242 in 2020. The ADL also counted a 14% increase in vandalism cases (from 751 in 2020 to 853 last year) and a 167% increase in assault incidents (from 33 in 2020 to 88 last year). The 88 assault

incidents involved 131 victims, none of whom were killed, the report says.

The ADL says it compiles data for its annual audit by evaluating informatio­n reported by news media, victims, law enforcemen­t and community leaders. The group says it avoids conflating general criticism of Israel or antiIsrael activism with antisemiti­sm.

“However, Israel-related harassment of identifiab­le groups or individual­s may be included when the harassment incorporat­ed anti-Jewish references, accusation­s and/or conspiracy theories, or when American Jews are demonized for their real or perceived support of Israel,” the report says.

 ?? July. Photograph: Allison Bailey/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Rabbi Jeffrey Myers of the Tree of Life Synagogue speaks at the ‘No Fear Rally in Solidarity with the Jewish People’ event in Washington last
July. Photograph: Allison Bailey/REX/Shuttersto­ck Rabbi Jeffrey Myers of the Tree of Life Synagogue speaks at the ‘No Fear Rally in Solidarity with the Jewish People’ event in Washington last

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