Baltimore Sun

Antisemiti­sm is not just a Jewish problem

- By Alan Ronkin Alan Ronkin (ronkina@ ajc.org) is director of the American Jewish Committee regional office in Washington.

In the months since the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack on Israel, antisemiti­c incidents and hate crimes have risen dramatical­ly, at a moment when they were already at alarmingly high levels.

FBI statistics indicate that Jews, a group that represents only about 2.4% of the American public, were targeted in 60% of all reported religion-based hate crimes nationwide last year.

All of that has created a palpable sense of fear in the Jewish community, which is reflected in American Jewish Committee’s recently released State of Antisemiti­sm in America 2023 Report. It found that 63% of the Jewish community say they feel less secure than a year ago and that one in five has been personally targeted. This compares to 41% last year and 31% in 2021.

Just as troubling,

30% of American Jews have avoided carrying or displaying things that might identify them as Jewish in public, up from 23% last year. These dramatic jumps indicate a much larger problem.

It isn’t just the Jewish community that feels this way. In our region, 74% of the public feels that antisemiti­sm is a problem, and 55% believe it has increased.

That is why we should take to heart remarks made last year by Gov. Wes Moore, who said, “I want everyone in Maryland to hear me clearly — hate has no home in our state. The recent rise in hate crimes against the Jewish community is absolutely unacceptab­le.”

Moore spoke after the Maryland State Police reported that religion-based crimes and incidents that targeted Jews in 2022 spiked by 60% compared to a year earlier. He is right. Those crimes are unacceptab­le.

Antisemiti­sm is not a Jewish problem. It’s a societal problem. And just like we wouldn’t ask the AAPI community, for example, to solve antiAsian hate on its own, we can’t expect the Jewish community to tackle antisemiti­sm by itself. However, according to AJC, 47% of American Jews feel that antisemiti­sm is taken less seriously than other forms of bigotry.

In 2022, the Southern Poverty Law Center identified more than 523 white supremacis­t hate groups in the U.S. Some were antiBlack, others anti-Asian. What they all appear to have in common: unabashed antisemiti­sm.

But what is antisemiti­sm? Most people believe it is simply hatred of

Jews. However, it’s more than that. According to the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance working definition, “Antisemiti­sm is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews,” through such activities as Holocaust denial, scapegoati­ng and holding Israel to a different standard than other countries.

Antisemiti­sm comes from the far-right, the far-left, religious extremists and from ignorance. It’s based on old and new conspiracy theories about Jews. And in a society where people increasing­ly believe in conspiraci­es, the danger to Jews is rising and real.

What do we do about this?

In May, the White House released a comprehens­ive plan to confront antisemiti­sm in America. It calls for a “whole of society” approach to make a difference. Everyone has a role to play — government, the private sector, religious institutio­ns — everyone. The plan asks that every American play a role in increasing awareness and understand­ing of antisemiti­sm, including its threat to America, and broaden appreciati­on of Jewish American heritage.

Perhaps most importantl­y it calls on us to build cross-community solidarity and collective action against hate. The good news is that most people, 90% of the public, agree, according to the AJC report.

Sometimes people feel they are just one person, and that a problem is too big for them to take on. But it’s not; most people don’t drink and drive anymore; people don’t smoke as much — and those changes happened because one person started to advocate for them.

In the White House strategy there is a section of recommenda­tions on what individual­s, corporatio­ns, businesses and government must do. These include speaking out about combating antisemiti­sm through education, pushing back against stereotype­s and recognizin­g the diversity and multicultu­ralism of the Jewish community like any other minority. And respond quickly to all forms of antisemiti­sm — don’t just let it slide in conversati­on.

Rooting out a 3,000-year-old hatred won’t be easy. But identifyin­g and paying attention to antisemiti­sm is. By noticing antisemiti­sm, standing up and being an ally to the Jewish community, we can push this hatred back to the fringes of society.

Antisemiti­sm comes from the farright, the far-left, religious extremists and from ignorance. It’s based on old and new conspiracy theories about Jews. And in a society where people increasing­ly believe in conspiraci­es, the danger to Jews is rising and real.

 ?? JULIA NIKHINSON/AP ?? A man wears a Star of David necklace and a blue ribbon during a visit by U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona to Towson University to discuss antisemiti­sm on college campuses.
JULIA NIKHINSON/AP A man wears a Star of David necklace and a blue ribbon during a visit by U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona to Towson University to discuss antisemiti­sm on college campuses.

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