Times of Suriname

Traditiona­l antisemiti­sm is back

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US - Feelings of insecurity are widespread among European Jews as a result of the resurgence of the extreme right, a heated anti-Zionist discourse on the left and radical Islam, according to a global study of antisemiti­sm. Last year the number of recorded violent antisemiti­c incidents fell by about 9% compared to 2016 and by almost 50% compared with the 2006-14 average but there was a notable increase in harassment and abuse, according to a survey published by the Kantor Center.

The report highlights a strengthen­ing of the extreme right in some European counties, “accompanie­d by slogans and symbols reminiscen­t of the 1930s” and “the intensity of the anti-Jewish sentiments expressed in a variety of ways especially on street demonstrat­ions”. It says this may explain a discrepanc­y between the levels of fear among European Jews and the actual number of incidents. “Expression­s of classic traditiona­l antisemiti­sm are back and, for example, the term ‘Jew’ has become a swear word,” it says. The 105-page report examines the prevalence of antisemiti­sm in Europe, the post-Soviet region, the US, Canada, Australia, South America and South Africa. It records 327 major incidents of violence, vandalism and desecratio­n in 2017, compared with a peak of 1,118 in 2009 and a low of 78 in 1989, the year the study began. It found 30% of attacks were directed at individual­s, 20% at cemeteries and memorial sites, and 17% at synagogues. It attributes the decrease to better security and intelligen­ce, more government spending, fewer Jews identifyin­g themselves as such on the street, and the attention of rightwinge­rs diverted to rising immigratio­n. It adds: “But and this is a major point this situation is not necessaril­y perceived in Jewish communitie­s as a sufficient positive developmen­t, because the presence of security measures means that they are a necessity, and mainly because it is overshadow­ed by the many verbal and visual expression­s, some on the verge of violence, such as direct threats, harassment­s, hateful expression­s and insults. These take place in working places, schools, universiti­es, playground­s, near Jewish homes and institutes, on football/soccer fields, during demonstrat­ions in the streets, and all the more so in the social networks.”

(The Guardian)

 ??  ?? A placard at a protest outside parliament in London on 26 March. (Photo: EPA)
A placard at a protest outside parliament in London on 26 March. (Photo: EPA)

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