The Columbus Dispatch

Study: Most Jews say anti-semitism growing

- By Julie Zauzmer

In 2019, a significan­t share of Jews in America sometimes hide the visible markers of their Judaism.

Almost 1 in 3 American Jews say they have avoided displaying or wearing something, such as a skullcap or Star of David necklace, that would reveal their Judaism, according to a study by the American Jewish Committee released Wednesday. The study examined how Jews perceive anti-semitism in the year since the massacre of 11 people at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh.

“It’s been a rough year, and it’s been an eye-opening and awakening year,” said David Harris, CEO of the American Jewish Committee. “Perhaps there was a time when some Jewish institutio­ns . . . felt somehow more or less insulated from [anti-semitic attacks]. The fact that the attacks took place in Pittsburgh and Poway (California) triggered a feeling that we’re all at risk everywhere, equally — it can happen anywhere.”

The survey of more than 1,200 Jews across the country, conducted nearly a year after the Tree of Life synagogue shooting, which occurred one year ago today, found a large majority worry about anti-semitism and a significan­t minority personally experience bias.

Eighty-four percent of American Jews said they think anti-semitism has increased in the United States in the past five years, with just 3 percent saying they think it has decreased. One in 5 said they had been the target of anti-semitic remarks online in the past five years, and 23 percent said they had been targeted by anti-semitic comments in person or through mail or phone. Another 2 percent said they had been the victim of a physical attack because they are Jewish.

For the first time, the American Jewish Committee asked a question that it hadn’t in the past: “Do you ever avoid certain places, events or situations out of concern for your safety or comfort as a Jew?”

One-quarter of respondent­s said yes, they have stayed away from certain events or places.

“Frankly, it’s a question that is regularly asked in surveys of European Jews,” Harris said. “We never thought some of the questions asked in those surveys in Europe might one day be very pertinent to the United States. There was always the sense that it was there and not here.”

When American Jews do go to synagogues or other Jewish institutio­ns, they sometimes confront hatred. One-third said they are affiliated with a Jewish institutio­n that has been the target of vandalism, threats or attacks.

And Jews are keenly aware of the measures that their synagogues are taking in response to these threats. More than half said their synagogues have hired security guards and they have seen police posted outside; almost 1 in 4 said their synagogues trained members on what to do in case of an attack.

The Secure Community Network, which helps synagogues protect their buildings and members, said it had received about 500 requests for assistance from Jewish groups in the year before the Pittsburgh shooting. This year, it has received about 2,000 requests.

The survey asked questions about which groups Jews worry about experienci­ng anti-semitism from, including the far right, the far left and Muslim extremists, and found fairly high levels of concern about all three.

But Harris took a more nuanced view in his answer to the question: “We’ve seen what’s happening in the United States as part of a larger phenomenon of growing anti-semitism worldwide,” he said. “Even a few years ago, things that would never have been said about Jews — maybe because of greater sensitivit­y to the Holocaust, or just a sense that in a liberal democracy we don’t say such things about other groups — those guardrails are down . . . . Liberal democracy itself is in crisis in many parts of the Western world. So those barriers that kind of contained the spread of antisemiti­sm and other forms of hatred, those barriers are being weakened.”

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