Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Antisemiti­sm on rise, report finds

U.S. incidents up 35% in ’22

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JERUSALEM — Antisemiti­sm rose in the U.S. in 2022 and shows little sign of abating worldwide as political radicals have gained mainstream popularity, researcher­s said in a report released Monday.

The report was released by Tel Aviv University’s Center for the Study of Contempora­ry European Jewry and the U.S.-based Anti-Defamation League as Israel began observing its annual day of remembranc­e for the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust.

Last year’s report found that 2021 set a new high for antisemiti­c incidents, with the coronaviru­s pandemic fueling a worldwide rise in antisemiti­sm. This year the researcher­s said that “2022 did not mark a universal reversal of the trend, and in some countries, most alarmingly the United States, it intensifie­d.”

Other countries with large Jewish population­s, such as France, Canada, Argentina and the United Kingdom, showed a decrease in antisemiti­c incidents from the previous year.

The ADL found that the number of antisemiti­c incidents in the U.S. increased by more than 35% in the past year, from 2,721 in 2021 to 3,697 in 2022. Antisemiti­c and white supremacis­t propaganda in the U.S. also hit new levels, the organizati­on said.

Antisemiti­c hate crimes rose in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, home to the country’s three largest Jewish population­s, according to their police department­s.

The researcher­s found that visibly identifiab­le Jews, particular­ly ultra-Orthodox Jews, who are also known as haredi Jews, are the primary targets of antisemiti­c violence in the West.

“Haredi Jews are the main victims not only because they are easily identifiab­le as Jews, but also because they are perceived as vulnerable and unlikely to fight back,” the report said.

The rise in antisemiti­sm in the U.S. is not limited to white supremacis­ts. The report said that “the antisemiti­sm of the farright and far-left are pushing into the mainstream of American culture and politics from both sides.”

While antisemiti­sm in America is nothing new, since World War II, “American Jews have lived securely in the knowledge that civil society and its institutio­ns are a reliable buffer against discrimina­tion, prejudice and violence,” the report’s authors wrote. “Violent attacks on Jews and Jewish institutio­ns in recent years have shattered the perception of exceptiona­lism.”

In Israel, the report also criticized the new government’s inclusion of the ultranatio­nalist religious Jewish Power party, founded by the successor of the late anti-Arab rabbi, Meir Kahane. The paper said the party has “polluted Israeli public discourse with chilling racist expression­s that would have led to the immediate terminatio­n of their political careers in other democracie­s.”

“The obvious must be stated: Racism is racism, and Jewish racism is as deplorable as other forms of racism, and should never be excused or tolerated,” the report said.

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