Chattanooga Times Free Press

Report: Antisemiti­c incidents in Georgia have risen by 63%

- BY CHRIS JOYNER THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

Anti-Jewish hatred spiked this past year in Georgia and the United States to the highest level recorded, according to a new report released Thursday by the Anti-Defamation League.

The annual report showing a 36% increase nationally in antisemiti­c incidents and a 63% increase in the state came as legislator­s are debating adding a definition of antisemiti­sm to the state’s hate crime law.

“Whether you’re Jewish or not, the ongoing rise of antisemiti­c incidents in our region and nation should concern you,” said Eytan Davidson, who heads up the ADL’s Southeast office. “We know trends like this signal increased bigotry overall, and that’s a reality that threatens the well-being and security in every community. It’s incumbent upon us all to combat hate together, especially when we see extremist activity on the rise.”

The new report comes a few weeks after the ADL reported a similar spike in the spread of white supremacis­t propaganda, much of which also was aimed at Jews.

The new report tallied 3,697 incidents of anti-Jewish animus across the nation, including assaults, harassment and vandalism, which the ADL said was the highest number recorded since the organizati­on began tracking incidents in 1979. In Georgia, the organizati­on tallied 80 occurrence­s, up from 49 in 2021. Of those, 70 were classified as harassment and 10 were vandalism. No assaults were recorded.

Much of the antisemiti­c harassment in Georgia came in the form of flyers stuck on car windshield­s or thrown in resident’s yards. The distributi­ons are part of an organized effort by a handful of activists allied with national hate groups that use such methods to gain media attention and drive online donations and sales of antisemiti­c or Nazi-themed parapherna­lia. During the past year and into 2023, such flyers have been distribute­d widely around the metro Atlanta region, but also elsewhere in the state, including multiple incidents in Athens, Newnan, Macon and Savannah.

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