The Jerusalem Post

No link between Muslim immigratio­n and antisemiti­sm, German study says

- • BY CNAAN LIPHSHIZ (Christian Mang/Reuters)

A study published by a German federal entity says that antisemiti­sm in Europe is unaffected by recent Muslim immigratio­n, prompting a prominent critic to call the report selective and flawed.

The claim appeared in a study published in May by the Berlin-based EVZ foundation, featuring research by the University of London’s Pears Institute for the Study of Antisemiti­sm.

It sought to measure how the arrival of more than two million people from the Middle East and Africa since 2011 has affected expression­s of antisemiti­sm in five Western European countries – Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherland­s and the United Kingdom.

“Neither the analysis of existing data nor of the interviews undertaken for this report suggests a significan­t connection” between the immigrants’ arrival and “the extent and character of antisemiti­sm in Western Europe,” the researcher­s wrote in the report titled “Antisemiti­sm and Immigratio­n in Western Europe Today, Is there a connection?”

Claims that the newcomers’ arrival to Europe could pose a threat to Jews appears to be based “on the perception­s of Jewish individual­s and communitie­s rather than the objective threat carried by immigrants,” the report states.

The report singles out for criticism Rabbi Andrew Baker, director of internatio­nal affairs for the American Jewish Committee and the point man on antisemiti­sm of the OSCE intergover­nmental organizati­on. Baker is among the individual­s who “expressed the idea that recent refugees bring dangers for Jews in Europe,” allegedly without proof, the study says.

Concerns on the same matter expressed by Ron van der Wieken, the chairman of the Central Jewish Board of the Netherland­s, also were listed in the study.

Baker hit back at the report’s authors in an op-ed he wrote last week for the Jewish Chronicle of London, saying they “ignore the data, dismiss the problem, and blame the victims.”

He wrote that the study “ignores” how in a major EU study of Jewish perception­s of antisemiti­sm, “respondent­s said that about 40% of the most serious incidents of physical violence or threats that they witnessed or experience­d came from ‘someone with a Muslim extremist view.’”

In the Netherland­s, the CIDI monitor estimated that “foreigners” are responsibl­e for 70% of antisemiti­c incidents. In December, a Syrian refugee smashed the windows of a kosher restaurant in Amsterdam while waving a Palestinia­n flag.

And in France, the National Bureau for Vigilance Against Antisemiti­sm said this year that people with Muslim background are responsibl­e for nearly all antisemiti­c violence in that country.

“Instead of confrontin­g these results,” Baker wrote,” the researcher­s “take pains to discount them.” He added: “Burying your head in the sand is rarely good advice, even if it comes in a 50-page package with footnotes.”

The study’s researcher­s wrote that there is evidence that people from Muslim societies may be likelier to harbor antisemiti­c sentiments than Europeans, but that this does not necessaril­y translate into action.

Muslim minorities have a “sense of grievance and injustice which is well grounded,” the authors wrote, adding this “prompts the question whether there is any connection between these experience­s of discrimina­tion, disadvanta­ge” by Muslims and “the persistenc­e of antisemiti­sm.” (JTA)

 ??  ?? ANTI-TRUMP PROTESTERS march in Berlin.
ANTI-TRUMP PROTESTERS march in Berlin.

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