The Mercury News

Antisemiti­sm worries rising for many U.S. Jews, acccording to new survey

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More than four in ten Jews in the United States feel their status in America is less secure than it was a year earlier, according to a new survey by the American Jewish Committee.

The survey, conducted in the fall of 2022, was released Monday by the AJC, a prominent Jewish advocacy organizati­on.

The survey was taken in a year of high-profile incidents of antisemiti­sm, including a hostage-taking at a Texas synagogue and anti-Jewish statements shared by celebritie­s on social media. Former President Donald Trump dined with two openly antisemiti­c guests, drawing criticism from his own Jewish supporters.

According to the AJC survey, 41% of the respondent­s said the status of Jews in the U.S. is less secure than it was the year before, while 55% said it was the same. Only 4% thought it was more secure.

The results show anxieties increasing since a comparable survey in 2021, when 31% of respondent­s thought their status was less secure than a year earlier.

Four in five Jews said in the 2022 survey that antisemiti­sm has grown in the past five years; nearly half said it's taken less seriously than other forms of bigotry or hate.

A quarter of the respondent­s said they were directly targeted by antisemiti­c expression­s, either in person or on social media, with 3% reporting a physical attack. Nearly four in 10 changed their behavior to lower risks to their safety.

Similarly, nearly four in ten reported avoiding visible expression­s of Jewishness in public, such as wearing a skullcap. Smaller percentage­s reported taking similar steps on campus or at work.

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