San Diego Union-Tribune

ADL: ANTISEMITI­C INCIDENTS ON RISE IN CALIFORNIA

State is addressing trend, non-emergency hotline for hate crimes created

-

More than 500 antisemiti­c acts targeting Jewish people, including assault, vandalism and harassment, were committed in California last year, an increase of more than 40 percent from 2021, underscori­ng a proliferat­ion of hate crimes and extremism in the state, according to a report released May 9 by the Anti-Defamation League.

The ADL also cited increasing collaborat­ion among extremist and White supremacis­t groups in a report detailing a wide range of hate crimes and violence. California saw at least six murders by members of extremist groups in 2021 and 2022 — the most in the nation — with three being linked to White supremacis­t groups, the report found.

The report on California comes after the Anti-Defamation League released another report, in collaborat­ion with Tel Aviv University’s Center for the Study of Contempora­ry European Jewry, that shows antisemiti­c incidents are at a new high worldwide, with the upward trend intensifyi­ng in the U.S.

In California, it found at least 518 antisemiti­c acts were committed in 2022, second only to New York with 580 incidents. That figure is a 41 percent increase from 2021, it said.

“There’s a common thread that connects every part of California, north and south, east and west, and that’s hate in all its forms,” Oren Segal, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League Center of Extremism, said. “Addressing the proliferat­ion of extremism, antisemiti­sm and hate is not only a profound challenge, it is one of the challenges of our time.”

The civil rights organizati­on’s report, called “Hate in the Golden State,” also found an increase in local White supremacis­t groups working together to spread propaganda and strengthen their presence across California.

Supremacis­t or antisemiti­c groups such as the Goyim Defense

League, Active Clubs and the White Lives Matter network are among the driving forces behind efforts in California to spread White supremacy ideology and organize anti-LGBTQ+ protests, the report said. Last year, the Anti-Defamation League recorded 296 instances of White supremacis­t propaganda being distribute­d in California, a jump of 91 percent from 155 instances in 2021.

The Anti-Defamation League says it has recorded at least 400 incidents where local lawmakers across the country were harassed or threatened between 2020 and 2022, with 64 instances in California.

California lawmakers and officials are attempting to address the trend. Earlier this month, the

Civil Rights Department unveiled a statewide non-emergency hatecrime hotline. The hotline, serving as an alternativ­e to law enforcemen­t, helps connect people who experience or witness hate crimes with various resources, including legal and mental health assistance.

Democratic Assemblyme­mber Cory Jackson of Riverside, who authored a bill that would create a hate crime interventi­on unit within the California Department of Public Health, said the extremism movement is gaining traction.

“This movement is well organized, is well funded, and they have a game plan, and they are executing that game plan,” he said. “This is our opportunit­y to making sure that we don’t take this lightly.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States