Part of a series on |
Antisemitism |
---|
Category |
Following the Hamas-led attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 and the outbreak of the Gaza war, there has been a surge of antisemitism around the world. [1] [2] [3]
On 8 October 2023, an Egyptian police officer shot and killed two Israeli tourists and an Egyptian tour guide in Alexandria, Egypt. [4] [5] [6] [7]
On 19 October 2023, the walls of the promenade in Sea Point in Cape Town were marked with graffiti referencing the nascent conflict. Of the two documented instances, one displays the phrase "I STAND WITH GENOCIDE" superimposed on an Israeli flag, while the other simply says "HOLOCAUST, OCT'23." Both were condemned as antisemitic and hostile to the local Jewish community and swiftly removed by the City of Cape Town. [8] [9]
A Jewish man walking to synagogue in the Johannesburg suburb of Sydenham was accosted by a male jogger screaming antisemitic insults at him. The jogger then assaulted the man, by knocking him over, kicking and punching him while he lay on the ground. A charge of assault has been laid at Sandringham Police Station. [10]
On January 12, 2024, Jewish cricket player David Teeger was stripped of the captaincy of the under-19 cricket team by Cricket South Africa. The removal of Teeger's captaincy was claimed by Cricket South Africa to have been a measure to reduce protests at the 2024 Under-19 Cricket World Cup, hosted in South Africa. [11] The measure led to claims of antisemitism by the South African Jewish Board of Deputies. [12]
On 18 October 2023, the El Hamma synagogue of El Hamma, Tunisia, which is a Jewish pilgrimage site and contains the tomb of 16th-century Kabbalist Rabbi Yosef Ma'aravi, was severely damaged during anti-Israel riots, with hundreds of people filmed setting fire to the building. [13] [14] [15]
On 15 November 2023, unknown assailants set fire to the Mordechai Navi Synagogue in Yerevan and disseminated the arson attack on social media. [16]
After the war began, the Associated Press noted a rise in antisemitism on Chinese social media sites, substantive enough that the Israeli embassy in Beijing had to filter comments on its social media account. An Israeli employee of the Israeli embassy in Beijing, China, was stabbed and injured by a foreign man on 13 October 2023. [17]
Antisemitic reactions to the Israel–Hamas war have been widespread on Chinese social media. [18] [19] [20] Antisemitic comments were not removed from Chinese social media sites indicating that the state is comfortable with these kinds of remarks, according to Eric Liu, an editor of China Digital Times . [21]
In November 2024, Chabad rabbi Zvi Kogan was found murdered in Al Ain, UAE. Emirati officials said he was abducted by three Uzbek nationals who fled to Turkey, where authorities apprehended and extradited them to the UAE. [22] [23]
On 1 November 2023, unidentified vandals set a fire and sprayed swastikas on external walls overnight in the Jewish section of the Vienna Central Cemetery. The entrance lobby to a ceremonial hall was burned for the first time since the 1938 Kristallnacht pogrom by the Nazis, but there were no injuries. The attack was condemned by Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer. [24] [25] [26]
A periodic survey among 8,000 Jews in 13 EU member states, published on 11 July 2024 by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, [27] indicated that 38% of the 363 Austrian respondents had experienced antisemitic harassment in the year before the survey. For instance, 62% of those polled encountered online antisemitism all the time in the year leading up to the survey and 18% said it had negatively affected their mental health. [28]
On 22 November 2023, at least 85 gravestones were damaged and many Stars of David were stolen from a cemetery in Charleroi. [29] Only the cemetery's Jewish section was vandalized. [30] On 19 December, swastikas and Stars of David were graffitied on gravestones in a Jewish cemetery in Kraainem. [31]
In February 2024, an Imam at the Belgian parliament recited a verse from the Quran explicitly calling for Muslims to kill and take Jews captive. [32]
In April 2024, a swastika was spray-painted on a Holocaust survivor's home in Fléron, alongside the words "Gaza free". [33]
In June 2024, a Holocaust memorial and a memorial for Nazi resistance fighters at park Bois de la Cambre were defaced respectively, with the latter spray-painted with a white swastika and Celtic cross. [34]
In January 2025, two schools in Brussels refused to take part in a Holocaust remembrance ceremony, citing the war in Gaza. [35]
Israel confirmed the Mossad helped local authorities foil a terror plot against Israeli and Jewish people in Cyprus on 10 December 2023. Netanyahu's office accused the Iranian government of being behind the plot, and said on behalf of the Mossad that Israel was "troubled" by Iranian use of Turkish-controlled Northern Cyprus for both terrorism and as an "operational and transit area". [36] [37]
In August 2024, the Federation of Jewish Communities in the Czech Republic reported 4,328 antisemitic incidents in the country in 2023, an increase of 90% from the previous year. From October to December, 1,800 incidents occurred, accounting for almost 42% of the incidents of the entire year. [38] [39]
Danish police arrested at least four suspected Hamas operatives who were planning attacks on Jewish or Israeli targets in Denmark. [40]
In February 2024, Denmark's Jewish community reported a record high of 121 antisemitic incidents in the country in 2023, 101 since the October 7 attacks. [41]
In October 2024, a group of 10 Danish imams refused to attend a meeting on antisemitism with the Integration Minister and Church Minister. Urfan Ahmed, a spokesperson for the Danish Muslim Union, denied that antisemitism was prevalent among Danish Muslims, despite a Jyllands-Posten survey finding that 35% of Danish Muslim respondents believed the October 7 attacks were justified. [42]
In response to a rise in antisemitic incidents in France, the French government banned pro-Palestinian demonstrations in the country. In a televised address on 12 October 2023, French President Emmanuel Macron warned, "Let's remember that antisemitism has always been the precursor to other forms of hate: one day against the Jews, the next against the Christians, then the Muslims, and then all those who are still the target of hate due to their culture, origin or gender." [43]
On 31 October 2023, Stars of David were painted in multiple spots across several building fronts in a southern district of Paris. Similar tags appeared over the weekend in suburbs of the city, including Vanves, Fontenay-aux-Roses and Aubervilliers. [44]
On 1 November 2023, Paris police chief Laurent Nunez opened a probe into antisemitic chants filmed on the Paris metro. In the video, youth are heard chanting, "Fuck the Jews and fuck your mother, long live Palestine. We are Nazis and proud of it." [45]
On 4 November 2023, a Jewish woman was stabbed in Lyon and a swastika was graffitied on her home. [46]
A report released in late January 2024, approximately 3.5 months post the October 7 attack, documented a significant uptick in antisemitic acts within France. The Service de Protection de la Communauté Juive (SPCJ) reported a 1000% surge in antisemitic incidents in 2023 compared to the previous year, totaling 1,676 recorded acts. The majority of these incidents targeted individuals, involving threatening words and gestures. [47]
The SPCJ identified "Palestine" as a significant factor, mentioned in almost one-third of antisemitic acts since October 7. Additionally, French Jews reported feeling increasingly unsafe, with a 1,500% increase in antisemitic acts in private spheres and a surge of 1,200% in antisemitic acts within schools or educational settings, often related to Nazism. [47]
Between 7 October and 17 December 2023 over 1,200 French Jews opened Aliyah files to migrate to Israel an increase of 430% compared to last year. Many were driven by a combination of solidarity with Israel as well as rising antisemitism in France. [48]
On March 1, 2024, a Jewish man was assaulted by a Muslim teenager and was called a "dirty Jew" after leaving a synagogue in the 20th district in Paris. The victim was hospitalized. [49]
Between 13 and 14 May 2024, vandals graffitied several sites around The Marais, a historic district home to many Jews, with red handprints, a symbol used by pro-Palestinian activists. [50] Sites vandalized include schools, nurseries, and The Wall of the Righteous, a memorial that honors individuals who saved Jews during the Nazi occupation of France. [51] The incident was described as antisemitic by French President Emmanuel Macron, President of the Conseil Représentatif des Institutions juives de France Yonathan Arfi, and the Union of Jewish Students in France. [52]
On 17 May 2024, a synagogue in Rouen was set on fire by an Algerian arsonist, damaging the synagogue significantly. [53] [54]
On 19 June 2024, two teenagers were charged with the gang rape of a 12-year-old Jewish girl in Courbevoie while making antisemitic remarks. [55] [56] A third boy was also charged for making antisemitic insults and death threats to the girl. [57] One boy admitted to hitting the victim due to her negative comments about Palestine. [58] The girl was reportedly called a "dirty Jew". [59]
On 27 July 2024, the Paris prosecutor's office launched an investigation into antisemitic crimes in a football match between Israel and Paraguay during the 2024 Summer Olympics. [60]
On 24 August 2024, an 33-year-old Algerian man set fires at the Beth Yacoov synagogue in La Grande-Motte in an attempt to burn it down. The fire caused a gas canister to explode, lightly injuring a police officer. The suspect said that he attacked the synagogue in support of Palestine and wanted to provoke a reaction from Israeli officials. [61] [62]
On the first anniversary of the October 7 attacks, three individuals attacked a woman in Paris with a knife, shouting antisemitic slurs and referencing the massacre. [63] On 13 October 2024, a teenage Jewish boy was attacked and beaten in Levallois-Perret, calling him a "dirty Jew", throwing him to the ground, and kicking him in the mouth. [64]
In October 2024, French MP Caroline Yadan and former Equality Minister and National Assembly member Aurore Bergé, co-signed by 90 other deputies, filed a bill to ban certain forms of antisemitic acts, including denying the existence or right of Israel to exist, and comparisons between Israel and Nazi Germany. These would be made punishable under the Gayssot Act. [65]
In Berlin, the houses of several Jews were marked with a Star of David, echoing the marking of Jewish homes and businesses during Nazism. [66] [67]
On 18 October 2023, two molotov cocktails were thrown at a synagogue in the Mitte neighborhood of central Berlin. One person was arrested. [68] Following the firebombing, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz declared, "Attacks on Jewish institutions and acts of violence on our streets are despicable and cannot be tolerated. Antisemitism has no place in Germany." [69] [70]
On 22 October 2023, Chancellor Scholz said, "I am deeply outraged by the way in which antisemitic hatred and inhuman agitation have been breaking out since that fateful October 7, on the internet, in social media around the world, and shamefully also here in Germany. Here in Germany, of all places. That is why our 'never again' must be unbreakable." [71]
On 2 February 2024, a pro-Palestinian college student in Berlin assaulted a Jewish classmate until he was hospitalized after an argument about the Israel-Hamas conflict. According to the Police the Jewish student was punched in the face until he fell to the ground after which was he was kicked while lying on the ground before the attackers fled the scene. The victim suffered non-fatal facial fractures while the attacker was arrested by the police. [72]
On 5 April 2024, an unknown individual threw an incendiary device at the door of a synagogue in the northern city of Oldenburg, causing a small blaze and minor damage. German police have offered a cash reward for information about the arson attack. [73]
On 2 November 2024, a Stolperstein (a memorial for Holocaust victims) in Oschersleben was stolen. Ten more were stolen the previous month in Zeitz, and five in Halle. [74]
Germany's Federal Association of Departments for Research and Information on Antisemitism (RIAS) reported that in the first half of 2024, they had recorded 1383 antisemitic incidents in Berlin alone, compared to 1270 in all of 2023. [75]
On 4 July 2024, Greek authorities arrested a Greek, Afghan, and Iranian for their involvement in an attempted arson attack against a synagogue in Athens. [76] On 17 July 2024, three individuals attacked Fahad Qubati, an Arab–Israeli tourist in Malia, Crete, suspecting that he was Jewish, resulting in injuries to his jaw and head. The attackers fled after a Tunisian national showed them a cross that Qubati was wearing to prove that he is Christian. [77] [78]
On 25 April 2024, during the march in celebration of Liberation Day in Milan, a group of North African youths wearing keffiyas and Palestinian flags attacked the participants of the Jewish Brigade in Piazza del Duomo with kicks, punches and sticks. [79] A 19-year-old Egyptian man was arrested for beating a security guard with a stick. Eight other men from North Africa have been reported to criminal prosecutors. [80]
In November 2024, a mural in Milan by artist aleXsandro Palombo of Holocaust survivors Liliana Segre and Sami Modiano was vandalized, with the figures' faces and Jewish stars scratched out. Several other works by the artist focusing on antisemitism have also been defaced. [81] Later that same month, a hotel manager in Selva di Cadore, Italy, canceled an Israeli couple's reservation, accusing all Israelis of "being responsible for genocide". [82]
On 11 January 2025, protesters in Bologna vandalized the city's historic synagogue, attacking it with fireworks and Molotov cocktails. [83]
Following the Gaza war, several Riga Stradiņš University students from Israel were reported to have received hate texts from other foreign students, with one person contacting the State Security Service in connection with anti-Semitic expressions and threats. Ministry of Education and Science said that it will assess the situation at the university regarding possible conflicts between foreign students in connection with the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, while the State Security Service confirmed that it is investigating the situation. [84]
Latvian Foreign Minister Krišjānis Kariņš said, "Latvia must have zero tolerance against any manifestations of incitement to ethnic hatred, and possible conflicts between foreign students of Riga Stradins University (RSU) should be taken very seriously", stressing that, "If it really turns out RSU students are inciting ethnic hatred, it could result not only in expulsion from the university, but also from the country". [85]
On 22 March 2024, a memorial for 6,000 Jewish victims of the Holocaust in Soroca Jewish Cemetery near Cosăuți was vandalized with graffiti that read "Free Palestine". [86]
Following the 7 October attacks, the local Jewish community voiced its concern that unrest in the Middle East could spread to the Netherlands, citing historical trends. [87] The National Coordinator for Combating Anti-Semitism of the Dutch government and the interest group Center for Information and Documentation Israel (CIDI) reported a considerable increase in antisemitic expression since the escalation of hostilities. [88] Recorded incidents, collected in accordance with the IHRA definition of antisemitism, [89] include acts of vandalism, verbal and physical abuse, intimidation, and bullying. [90] [91]
On 25 October 2023, the CIDI filed a complaint against the owner of the popular Instagram account Cestmocro and a number of its followers for inciting hatred and violence against Jews. It also called on the cabinet of ministers to take an explicit position "against this form of incitement against the Jewish community." [92] [93] Instagram removed the account Cestmocrotv of the same owner on 8 November. [94]
On 9 November 2023, an editorial cartoon by Jos Collignon in de Volkskrant attracted controversy for portraying the CIDI as an appendage on the "long arm of Israel" and for allegedly trivializing Jewish concerns. [95] [96]
In December 2023, German prosecutors announced the arrests of four suspected Hamas members, one of whom was a Dutch national who had been apprehended in Rotterdam. The group had allegedly planned to attack Jewish sites. [97]
Allegations of antisemitism were raised after a series of lectures on the Holocaust at the Utrecht University of Applied Sciences (HU) were postponed indefinitely in January 2024, after pro-Palestinian activists had criticized the involvement of the CIDI in the development of the curriculum. [98] [99] In a statement, the university announced that it needed "more time to place the events of 7 October and beyond in a broader perspective, with room for diverse opinions and beliefs", later adding that "the safety of speakers, students, teachers and visitors cannot be guaranteed". [100] The CIDI and fellow interest groups in the Central Jewish Consultation responded negatively, questioning the relation between Holocaust education and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and claiming that the HU had shown that "threats and intimidation work". [101] In the wake of widespread disapproval and criticism from politicians and other public figures, the university reversed its decision. [102]
On 3 February 2024, the historic synagogue of Middelburg was found to be defaced with swastikas. Mayor Harald Bergmann voiced his disgust and police started an investigation. [103] On 19 February, an underaged boy was detained for the act of vandalism and entered into a juvenile delinquency intervention program. [104]
On 10 March 2024, the National Holocaust Museum in Amsterdam was inaugurated by King Willem-Alexander in a ceremony attended by a number of Holocaust survivors and their descendants, Jewish community leaders, and foreign dignitaries, which included President Isaac Herzog of Israel. [105] [106] In response, about a thousand pro-Palestinian demonstrators gathered in the vicinity to protest Israel's conduct in the war against Hamas. [107] [108] The atmosphere of the protests around the Portuguese Synagogue was described as "grim", as protesters jeered at ceremony guests, threw projectiles, vandalized police vehicles, and skirmished with riot police, resulting in 13 arrests. [109] [110]
A concert by Lenny Kuhr in Waalwijk on 24 March 2024 was disrupted by four people who unfurled a Palestinian flag and called her a terrorist and accused the singer's family in Israel of genocide. [111] Demissionary Minister of Justice and Security Dilan Yeşilgöz denounced the action and stated: "That is hatred of Jews. There is no place for that in the Netherlands." [112] The National Coordinator for Combating Anti-Semitism, Eddo Verdoner, also described the incident as antisemitic. Kuhr is Jewish and has relatives living in Israel, including a grandchild who is a conscript in the country's military. [113]
On 9 July 2024, a statue of Holocaust victim Anne Frank on the Merwedeplein in Amsterdam was discovered to be defaced. The statue's feet had been daubed in red paint and the word 'Gaza' was sprayed onto its pedestal. Mayor Femke Halsema condemned the act of vandalism as an "incredible disgrace" and called on witnesses to come forward. [114] On 4 August, the 80th anniversary of the Frank family's arrest, the statue was again smeared with red paint. This time the text 'Free Gaza' was sprayed onto the pedestal and the statue's hands were also daubed in paint. [115] Later in August, an information board in Gouda describing Frank's persecution and the publication of her diary was left illegible after a Palestinian flag was sprayed on it. [116] [117]
A periodic survey among 8,000 Jews in 13 EU member states, published on 11 July 2024 by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, [27] showed that respondents in the Netherlands experienced above-average levels of antisemitism. [118] The report indicated that 97% of the 561 Dutch respondents had encountered antisemitism in their daily life in the year leading up to the survey and 83% thought that antisemitism had increased in the last five years. 78% of those polled felt they were blamed at least occasionally for the Israeli government's actions because they are Jewish, 77% avoided wearing Jewish symbols in public at least occasionally (including 49% who never wear Jewish symbols for safety concerns), and 42% avoided certain places because they did not feel safe as a Jew. Moreover, 39% of respondents had experienced antisemitic harassment in the year before the survey and 6% had been victim of an antisemitic attack in the last five years. [119]
On 7 November 2024, Jewish and Israeli fans of Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. were attacked in Amsterdam. [120] The Jerusalem Post and The Times of Israel described the attacks as a pogrom, and Israel sent emergency flights to evacuate its citizens. [121] The mayor of Amsterdam referred to the attackers as "antisemitic hit-and-run squads". [122] Five people were hospitalised and 62 people were arrested [123] Taxi drivers were reported to be attacking Jews as well. [124] Multiple Israeli and Jewish figures, as well as the US Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism Deborah Lipstadt, compared the event to Kristallnacht , a pogrom in Germany that occurred in 1938. [125] [126] [127]
At a pro-Palestinian protest in Warsaw on 21 October 2023, a Norwegian medical student was pictured holding an antisemitic poster that showed the flag of Israel in a trash can alongside the text "keep the world clean." [128] [129]
On 12 December 2023, far-right Polish lawmaker Grzegorz Braun used a fire extinguisher on a lit menorah and removed it from the wall during a Hanukkah celebration involving Polish-Jewish leaders and Israel's ambassador in the country's parliament. [130] Braun then said, "There can be no place for the acts of this racist, tribal, wild Talmudic cult on the premises of the Sejm." He was expelled from parliament as a result, and his actions were condemned by several Polish politicians and his own party. [131] [132]
On Yom HaShoah, May 2024, a group of pro-Palestinian protesters disrupted the March of the Living, a remembrance march from Auschwitz to Birkenau to commemorate the Jewish victims of the concentration camps. Survivors of the 7 October attacks were also present at the march. [133] [134]
In October 2024, a sign calling for Jews to be sent to gas chambers was seen at a pro-Palestinian protest at Jagiellonian University in Krakow. [135]
On 11 October 2023, three days after the October 7 attacks by Hamas on Israel, vandals defaced the synagogue of Porto's Jewish community, leaving pro-Palestinian messages, including "Free Palestine" and "End Israeli apartheid". [136] [137] On February 3, 2024, a housing protest in Porto escalated into an antisemitic demonstration, where participants held signs assigning blame to Jews and Zionists for economic challenges. Some signs called for the 'cleansing the world of Jews'. [138]
On 29 October 2023 a mob of antisemitic protesters stormed the airport in Dagestan in search of Israeli passengers from Tel Aviv. [139] [140] On 23 June 2024, Islamic extremist gunmen in Dagestan attacked synagogues and churches, setting fire to the Kele-Numaz Synagogue in Derbent and a synagogue in Makhachkala. [141] [142]
On 18 October 2023, the Or Zaruah synagogue in Melilla, a Spanish enclave in North Africa, was attacked by a mob chanting "murderous Israel" while waving Palestinian flags. [143] [144] [145] In October 2023, Isaac Benzaquén, president of the Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain, met with Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, denouncing the “anti-Israeli and anti-Jewish climate” in Spain that has caused many Jews to not wear Jewish symbols for fear of being attacked. [146]
In April 2024, a woman wearing a shirt with the date 7 October and an anti-fascist symbol was arrested by Spanish police after insulting and assaulting another woman for being Jewish during a pro-Palestine demonstration in Madrid. [147]
Since the start of the war, false claims of Swedish media such as the Bonnier Group silencing pro-Palestinian voices due to being run by Jews and Zionists have spread on social media. [148] One viral video posted in October 2023 claimed that all major Swedish media outlets are "owned by Jewish families". [149] [148]
On 4 November 2023, pro-Palestinian demonstrators burned an Israeli flag and chanted "bomb Israel" outside the Malmö Synagogue. The European Jewish Congress condemned the incident: "Intimidating the Jewish community and blaming them for the events in the Middle East is blatant antisemitism." [150]
In 2024, The Times of Israel reported that between October 7th, 2023, and the end of December, 2023, there were 110 reported antisemitic incidents, over four times as many as the previous year. About 20% contained reference to the Israel-Hamas War, blaming individual Swedish Jews for Israel's actions in Gaza. [151]
On March 2, 2024, an Orthodox Jew was stabbed by a 15-year old in Zürich. [152] The teen later said that he was doing the attack on behalf of Al-Aqsa, alluding to Jihadist concepts. [153]
Turkish Jewish newspaper Şalom reported rising cases of antisemitism and reported hate speech on Twitter [154]
On 13 October 2023, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said, "There's been a quite frankly disgusting rise in antisemitic incidents." [155] On 20 October 2023, The Guardian reported that according to the Metropolitan police, there has been a 1,350% increase in hate crimes against Jewish people since the war started. [156]
In August 2024, the Jewish charity group Community Security Trust recorded 1,978 antisemitic incidents in the UK in the first half of 2024, more than double compared to the year prior. [157] On 5 August, pro-Palestinian protesters demonstrated outside of Regent's Park Open Air Theatre in London as it played a performance of Fiddler on the Roof , a story about a Jewish man attempting to preserve his traditions in the Russian Empire during the 20th century. [158]
Community Security Trust tallied 272 antisemitic incidents during the 2023-2024 school year, over five times the number in the previous year. In one example, the University of Leeds Jewish chaplain received threats to rape and kill his wife and murder his children. The surge mirrored the previous peak which was during the 2021 Israel-Hamas conflict. [159]
In November 2024, leaflets with antisemitic threats in English and Hebrew were scattered in Hendon, a Jewish neighborhood of London. [160] On November 28, a group of teenagers attacked a bus of Jewish schoolchildren, pelting it with rocks and shouting "fuck Israel". [161]
On 17 October 2023, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said, "Since this conflict broke out, there has been a very scary rise of antisemitism here at home." [162] On 8 November, Trudeau added, "We're seeing right now a rise in antisemitism that is terrifying: Molotov cocktails thrown at synagogues, horrific threats of violence targeting Jewish businesses, targeting Jewish daycares with hate, this needs to stop." [163]
On 7 November 2023, there was an attempted arson attack against Congregation Beth Tikvah synagogue and a Jewish Community Center in Montreal. [164] [165]
Eta Yudin, vice president of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA) said that her organization was aware of over a dozen alleged hate crimes and over 25 "hateful incidents" in the month since the Hamas attack. [165]
Multiple cases of antisemitism were reported at Concordia University with Jewish students facing verbal and physical threats from both other students and faculty members. On 8 November 2023 footage of Professor Yanise Arab shouting at Jewish Concordia students to "go back to Poland, sharmuta (whore in Arabic)" went viral alongside another video of a student using the slur kike. [166]
On 9 November 2023 in Montreal, two Jewish children's schools, Talmud Torah Elementary and Yeshiva Gedola, were targeted with gunfire overnight, leaving bullet holes. [167] [168] On 12 November, Yeshiva Gedola was struck with gunfire for a second time. In a press conference that day, Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante said, "The Jewish community in Montreal is currently under attack." [169]
Shortly after midnight on 27 November 2023, a Jewish community center belonging to the Jewish Community Council of Montreal was attacked with a Molotov cocktail. [170]
The Toronto Police Service's Hate Crime Unit reported that there were 135 antisemitic incidents in Toronto in 2023, including five anti-Israeli incidents, up from 65 in 2022. [171] The Toronto Transit Commission has also received hundreds of reports of antisemitic graffiti in subway stations. [172]
Jewish students and teachers of the Peel District School Board complained to the National Post about antisemitism and violent threats. A teacher posted "Jews are the problem" in a private Facebook group while students chanted "we call for Jewish genocide," during a protest. [173]
On 31 May, a man set fire to the entrance of a synagogue in Vancouver. [174]
In November 2024, a woman wearing a keffiyeh performed a Nazi salute at a Montreal pro-Palestine protest. Later, the coffee company a franchise of which she ran condemned her "hateful remarks and gestures" and terminated their contract. [175] Toronto police received over 200 reports of antisemitic hate crimes in 2024. At an interfaith rally against hate and antisemitism, City Councillor James Pasternak said Toronto's response to hate crimes has been "a total institutional failure on how to handle the situation". [176]
From April 19 to December 1, 2024, the Toronto synagogue Kehillat Shaarei Torah was vandalized and attacked seven times, with hammers, rocks, spray paint, fire, and on one occasion a dead raccoon. [171]
On 18 December 2024, the Congregation Beth Tikvah synagogue in Montreal was attacked by an incendiary device, causing damage to a window and a door. Firefighters responded shortly before 3:00 a.m. and put out the fire. Police reported a broken window and damaged glass door on a nearby Jewish office building in another apparent attack. Both buildings were the target of an attack in November 2023. [177] [178]
Since the beginning of the Gaza war on October 7, 2023, the rate of antisemitic incidents in the US has increased. [179] A study commissioned by the Combat Antisemitism Movement estimates that 61% of American Jews reported experiencing antisemitism during the year since the war began, and that the proportion of Jewish adults in the US saying there was antisemitism in their area was more than double that of previous years. [180] Surveys published February 2024 by the American Jewish Committee estimate that since October 7, 2023, the proportion of Americans who say that the "status of Jews in the U.S. is less secure than a year ago" increased significantly, and the top reason given was the war and its aftermath. [181]
On October 25, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) reported antisemitic incidents in the U.S. had increased 388% since the war began, including assault, harassment, and vandalism, [182] and an ADL report in 2024 found that there were 200% more antisemitic incidents from October 7, 2023 to September 24, 2024, relative to the same period a year prior. [183] A December 2024 study by the ADL found that job applicants with Jewish or Israeli names were discriminated against in hiring. [184]
The ADL's assessment of the increase in antisemitic incidents has been criticized for conflating criticism of Israel with antisemitism. On November 11, 2023, The Intercept reported the Anti-Defamation League was including Jewish anti-war and peace rallies in its analysis of antisemitic attacks. [185] Bernie Steinberg, the former director of Harvard Hillel, told The Harvard Crimson that pro-Israeli activists should stop "weaponizing" charges of antisemitism against pro-Palestinian activism, writing, "It is not antisemitic to demand justice for all Palestinians living in their ancestral lands." [186]
Accusations that Israel is committing genocide in the Gaza strip as part of the ongoing war have increased since it began, with human rights organizations Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch both accusing Israel of genocide in late 2024. [187] [188] Some commentators have said that such accusations can be antisemitic. The novelist and historian of Israel Dara Horn said that there has been a proliferation of “fact-resistant slogans that demonize Jews” since October 7 across America, offering the example of “Genocide supporters!”. Horn called these accusations “recycled from medieval blood libels and KGB talking points”. [189] Genocide accusations have been criticized in strong terms as a kind of "blood libel". [190] [191] [192]
Demonstrators at protests against the Israel–Hamas war and other aspects of the Arab-Israeli conflict have been accused of antisemitic acts.
On 10 June 2024, a demonstration organized by Within Our Lifetime took place near a memorial exhibit in lower Manhattan for the victims of the Nova music festival massacre, in which over 360 people were killed. New York leaders and politicians, including mayor Eric Adams and US Representatives Hakeem Jeffries, Ritchie Torres, Jamaal Bowman, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez condemned the demonstration as antisemitic. [193] [194] Two days later, five houses (three in Manhattan, two in Brooklyn) belonging to Jewish leaders and board members, including Brooklyn Museum director Anne Pasternak were vandalized with red paint and pro-Palestinian graffiti. Red triangles were spray-painted onto one of the houses. [195] The NYPD recorded 45 antisemitic hate crimes in New York City in June 2024, 57% of the total number of hate crimes. [196]
On June 23, 2024, pro-Palestinian demonstrators attempted to block people from entering the main entrance of the Adas Torah synagogue, Los Angeles, which was hosting a seminar about real estate in Israel and the West Bank. Organizers said they were protesting the advertisement of homes in the occupied West Bank, where Israeli settlements are illegal under international law. [197] The demonstration deteriorated into violent clashes between pro-Palestinian participants and pro-Israel counterprotesters. A Jewish woman was beaten at the scene. [198] President Biden tweeted "I'm appalled by the scenes outside of Adas Torah synagogue in Los Angeles. Intimidating Jewish congregants is dangerous, unconscionable, antisemitic, and un-American." [199] At least two lawsuits have been filed against the protest groups, alleging that they violated the law by blocking people from attending a religious event. [200]
In May 2024, around half of the Seattle Wing Luke Museum's employees walked out to protest a new exhibit on racism and antisemitism titled "Confronting Hate Together", claiming that part of the exhibit "conflate[s] anti-Zionism with antisemitism". [201] [202]
The increase in antisemitic incidents has included instances of individual harassment and violent or property crime. On October 9, 2023, a sukkah at California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt was vandalized with anti-Israel graffiti. [203] On October 10, a man threw rocks through the glass doors of a synagogue and cafe in Fresno, California, the second with a note reading "All Jewish businesses will be targeted". [204] On October 11, at Columbia University, a woman assaulted an Israeli man with a stick after he confronted her for ripping down posters with pictures of and information about kidnapped Israelis. She has been charged with a hate crime. [205] On October 11, a man was arrested for sending threatening emails to a synagogue in Charlotte, North Carolina. [206] On October 14, a man in New York's Grand Central Terminal punched a woman in the face and told her it was because she was Jewish. [207]
On October 15, 2023, in Berkeley, California, a billboard calling out antisemitism was defaced with anti-Israel graffiti. Several San Francisco buildings were vandalized with similar messages—some praising Hamas' attacks—sparking condemnation by Mayor London Breed and District Attorney Brooke Jenkins, who characterized the graffiti as antisemitic. [208] Around seven members of White Lives Matter California held a demonstration on a bridge in Walnut Creek, holding up signs reading "No More Wars for I$rael" and promoting the neo-Nazi propaganda film Europa: The Last Battle . [209]
On October 19, 2023, the Illinois Comptroller's office fired one of its lawyers, Sarah Chowdhury, over antisemitic remarks she posted on the Instagram page of another lawyer, who is Jewish. The latter said that Chowdhury had been prompted to make the remarks by media coverage of the war in Gaza. Chowdhury was also fired from her position as president of the South Asian Bar Association of Chicago. [210]
A man broke into a Jewish family's home in Los Angeles on October 25, 2023, yelling "Free Palestine" and "Kill Jews". [179]
On October 29, threats against the Jewish community at Cornell University were posted online, threatening to shoot, rape, and murder Jewish students and encouraging violence against them. The FBI is investigating the incident as a hate crime. On October 31, the New York State Police announced they had a person of interest in custody. [211] [212] On November 3, CNN reported the arrest of 20-year-old Jordanian national Sohaib Abuayyash for plotting a terrorist attack against the Jewish community in Houston, Texas. [213] At the University of Massachusetts, a Jewish student attending a peaceful event on November 3 calling for the release of hostages was attacked by another student, who also spat on an Israeli flag. [214]
On November 6, a woman was arrested after ramming her car into a Black Hebrew Israelite school in Indianapolis, Indiana, mistakenly believing it to be an "Israel school." [215] On December 7, a man fired two rounds from a shotgun into the air outside a synagogue in Albany and made threatening statements, but no injuries were reported. The shooter was confronted by a nearby driver and fled after claiming he was being wronged; he is also alleged to have said "Free Palestine" at some point during the attack. Albany police arrested the shooter about a block away. [216] The shooter was identified as Mufid Fawaz Alkhader, a 28-year-old resident of Schenectady who was born in Iraq. [217]
In January 2024 a game between the girls' varsity teams from The Leffell School and Roosevelt High School Early College Studies in Yonkers was stopped when Roosevelt students began hurling antisemitic slurs at Leffell students. The New York City Public Schools Alliance reported that one of the students yelled "I support Hamas, you fucking Jew" and during the third quarter became aggressive and violent during the play resulting in injuries of Leffell's players. [218] [219]
On 29 May 2024, a man was arrested after saying antisemitic statements and attempting to ram pedestrians with his car outside of an Orthodox Jewish school in New York City. He was charged with second-degree attempted murder as a hate crime. [220]
On 10 August 2024, 22-year-old Victor Sumpter stabbed a Jewish man in his 30s near the headquarters of the Chabad Lubavitch movement in Crown Heights, Brooklyn while yelling "Free Palestine". The Jewish man was hospitalized and was expected to recover. Sumpter was arrested and charged second-degree assault as a hate crime. [221]
On October 22, 2024, the Philadelphia synagogue Congregation Mikveh Israel was targeted with vandalism, arson, and an attempted break-in. [222] Several other Philadelphia synagogues had been targeted with antisemitic, anti-Zionist, and neo-Nazi graffiti in April. [223]
On October 26, 2024, a man in Chicago was arrested and charged with 14 felonies after shooting a 39-year-old Jewish man who was walking to synagogue. The gunman, Sidi Mohamed Abdallahi, also shot at police and paramedics before being apprehended. Alderman Debra Silverstein called for the case to be treated as a hate crime. [224] On November 1, authorities charged Abdallahi with terrorism and hate crime charges. [225] Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson condemned the attack following Silverstein's criticism of his initial failure to identify the victim as "a Jewish man, wearing traditional Jewish garb, walking to a Jewish place of worship on the Jewish day of rest." [225] Abdallahi, a Mauritanian national and illegal immigrant, had been released into the U.S. following his apprehension by the San Diego Sector Border Patrol in March 2023. [226]
Antisemitic slogans and graffiti were noted on medical campuses including UCLA and UCSF, along with demonization of Israel, rationalizing terrorism, and faculty posting antisemitic tropes and “derogatory comments about Jewish health care professionals”. [227]
In November 2024, hundreds of posters depicting Jewish faculty members as "wanted" were spread across the University of Rochester campus. The posters accused Jewish faculty members of ethnic cleansing, racism, hate speech, and intimidation. University President Sarah Mangelsdorf called the incident an act of antisemitism. [228]
On the November 2024 anniversary of Kristallnacht, the only glatt kosher restaurant in the U.S capital, Washington D.C., was vandalized by breaking glass. Kristallnacht, the Nazi-ordered night of antisemitic attacks on Jewish homes, synagogues and businesses, was known as the ‘night of the broken glass”. [229]
Hedy Wald and Steven Roth noted increased antisemitic incidents in U.S. medicine during the Israel-Hamas war, including Holocaust distortion and inversion. [227]
In December 2024, a Jewish University of Michigan regent was targeted three times with Hamas symbolism and vandalism to his home, which the university called “a clear act of antisemitic intimidation.” [230]
In January 2025, Columbia University professor Katherine Franke left the university after an investigation found she had harassed Israeli students. [231]
During the 2025 California wildfires, far-left anti-Zionist groups Code Pink and Within Our Lifetime blamed Israel for the fires. Their remarks were condemned by Anti-Defamation League head Jonathan Greenblatt, head of the progressive Jewish Council for Public Affairs Amy Spitalnick, and New York Congressman Ritchie Torres. Torres wrote that “the nature of antisemitism is to scapegoat the Jewish people and the Jewish state for everything wrong in the world—no matter how tenuous the causal connection.” [232] [233]
In January 2025, An Israeli owned restaurant in Manhattan, New York was vandalized with spilled red paint representing blood and messaging including “Genocide cuisine” and “Israel steals culture”. The owner did not initially clean the graffitied text in order to spread awareness of antisemitism in the New York area. [234]
In January 2025, anti-Israel demonstrators vandalized the driveway to the Oheb Shalom Congregation in South Orange, New Jersey, with the phrase "Terrorists this way" with an arrow pointing towards the synagogue. Demonstrators attended to protest a talk about the Israeli Air Force’s search-and-rescue unit. [235]
On October 9, 2023, participants in a pro-Palestinian rally in Sydney organized by Palestine Action Group, were widely reported to have chanted "Gas the Jews" in front of the Sydney Opera House. [236] however a subsequent police review found that the phrase being chanted was "where's the Jews" and there was evidence of other "offensive and completely unacceptable" chants being said at the rally, such as "fuck the Jews". [237] [238]
On October 13, three men gave a Nazi salute outside the Sydney Jewish Museum. [239] On October 14, 20-30 members of the neo-Nazi National Socialist Network marched in front of and into the Flinders Street railway station in Melbourne, displaying a banner reading "Expose Jewish Power" and distributing neo-Nazi literature. [240]
Between October and December 2023, Australia experienced a surge in both antisemitism and Islamophobia [ relevant? ] following the outbreak of hostilities between Israel and Hamas on 7 October. [241] [242] Between 7 October and 8 November, the ECAJ recorded 221 antisemitic incidents, with 42 being recorded in one week alone. Documented hate crime incidents have included spitting at women, gun threats, threats to synagogues and Jewish schools, graffiti, property damage, hate mail, and verbal abuse. The Victorian Police also recorded 72 reports of antisemitic incidents between 7 October and 9 November, resulting in 37 investigations and 10 arrests. ECAJ's research director Julie Nathan believed that many incidents of antisemitism went unreported. [242] By 9 December 2023, ECAJ estimated there had been a 591% increase in reported antisemitic incidents in Australia in 2023. Notable incidents have included a Sydney Jewish man being verbally abused for wearing a kippah [241] and Jewish parents advising their children to hide Jewish clothing in public. [241]
Elsa Tuet-Rosenberg, Matt Chun and Zaineb Mazloum, and Clementine Ford launched a doxxing campaign against Jewish creatives in Australia releasing personal details of over 600 including those with no direct connection with Israel and have not made public comments about the Hamas massacre or the war in Gaza resulting in a campaign of antisemitic harassment and death threats. Several of their shops were graffitied with "No Jews" messages while a couple received death threats to their 5-year-old child with a photograph of their child with a message saying "I Know where you live". [243] [244] [245]
On October 12, 2024 (Shabbat and Yom Kippur), a bakery in Sydney owned by Jewish television chef Ed Almagor was vandalized with the word "beware" and an inverted red triangle. [246]
On December 6, two masked men smashed a window on the Adass Israel synagogue in Ripponlea, Melbourne, and then poured gasoline inside and lit it ablaze while worshippers were inside for morning prayer, forcing them to evacuate and injuring at least one person. A large fire broke out, and 60 firefighters battled the flames for about two hours. Significant damage was caused to the synagogue, mostly in its Sephardi section. [247] [248] The incident was condemned by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who described it as a "deliberate, unlawful attack" and assured that antisemitism had no place in the country. [249]
In January 2025, a day care center in Sydney was lit ablaze and extensively damaged alongside antisemitic graffiti, [250] one of numerous arson and graffiti attacks which escalated to a foiled plot to use explosives, [251] according to Australian authorities. New South Wales Premier Chris Minns described the plot as "terrorism" [251] .
On November 7, 2023, pro-Palestinian graffiti was sprayed on the fence of the Beth Shalom centre in Auckland's Epsom suburb. An unsuccessful attempt was also made to set the property on fire. Google Maps had mistakenly listed the property as the local Israeli consulate. The incident was condemned by ACT Party Member of Parliament David Seymour, who reported the matter to Police. [252]
In mid November 2023, New Zealand's Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) and The Disinformation Project reported a surge in both anti-Semitism and Islamophobia in New Zealand following the Israel-Hamas war. Antisemitic content surfaced on both social media and gaming platforms. According to Disinformation Project researcher Kate Hannah, New Zealand Jews were increasingly conflated with all Israelis and the Israeli Government. Hannah said that these attitudes were anti-semitic, xenophobic and contributed to division in New Zealand society. Similarly, New Zealand Jewish Council spokesperson Juliet Moses reported a surge in anti-semitic threats of violence, death threats and extreme abuse both online and offline since 7 October. [253]
In mid December 2023, a survey conducted by the Holocaust Centre of New Zealand reported that New Zealand Jewish children were encountering an increase in antisemitic abuse, intimidation, and bullying. In two cases, one child was physically assaulted and another had a swastika and a Star of David drawn side-by-side on their school shirt. While the Holocaust Centre usually dealt with two formal anti-Semitic complaints each year, the number of complaints had increased by five times in the past two months since 7 October 2023. According to the Holocaust Centre, 40% of the incidents reported in the survey involved dehumanising and demonising allegations about Jews. These included children being greeted by their peers with Nazi salutes, being called "dirty Jews," being told "Jews control the world," and jokes about Jews being gassed, and the blood libel claim that Jews "chopped off baby's heads." However, only 40% of parents reported these incidents to their schools with the majority preferring to resolve the matter with the parent of the bullying child. [254]
In November 2024, the New Zealand Jewish Council reported a sharp increase in antisemitic incidents, with 227 in the year since October 7, an average of 9.7 each month, compared to 166 in the eight years from 2014 to 2022. [255]
On 18 October 2023, the US and Israeli embassies in Buenos Aires received bomb threats via email, including one which said "Jews we are going to kill you all." Federal police evacuated the areas around the embassies in response, and an investigation was opened to find the source of the threats. [256]
On 30 December 2023, three foreign nationals from Lebanon and Syria were arrested under suspicion of planning an attack as the country held the Maccabiah Games. [257] The three, reportedly waiting for a 35-kilo parcel from Yemen, were suspected to be part of a terror cell, and they rented rooms in a hotel which was no more than two blocks away from the Israeli embassy. [258]
On 8 November 2023, Brazilian authorities announced they had arrested two suspects in a Hezbollah-backed terror plot to attack synagogues and other Jewish targets in the country. [259]
On 8 October 2023, a column on the Israeli embassy in Bogotá was vandalized with a swastika, Star of David, and the word "terror" in Hebrew. [260]
Israeli Immigration Minister Ofir Sofer has stated that Israel is bracing to expect a large wave of Jews migrating to Israel due to the rising antisemitism around the world. [261]
Antisemitism or Jew-hatred is hostility to, prejudice towards, or discrimination against, Jews. This sentiment is a form of racism, and a person who harbours it is called an antisemite. Primarily, antisemitic tendencies may be motivated by negative sentiment towards Jews as a people or by negative sentiment towards Jews with regard to Judaism. In the former case, usually presented as racial antisemitism, a person's hostility is driven by the belief that Jews constitute a distinct race with inherent traits or characteristics that are repulsive or inferior to the preferred traits or characteristics within that person's society. In the latter case, known as religious antisemitism, a person's hostility is driven by their religion's perception of Jews and Judaism, typically encompassing doctrines of supersession that expect or demand Jews to turn away from Judaism and submit to the religion presenting itself as Judaism's successor faith—this is a common theme within the other Abrahamic religions. The development of racial and religious antisemitism has historically been encouraged by anti-Judaism, which is distinct from antisemitism itself.
New antisemitism is the concept that a new form of antisemitism developed in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, typically manifesting itself as anti-Zionism. The concept is included in some definitions of antisemitism, such as the working definition of antisemitism and the 3D test of antisemitism. The concept dates to the early 1970s.
The Community Security Trust (CST) is a British charity whose stated mission is to provide safety, security, and advice to the Jewish community in the UK. It provides advice, training, representation and research.
The history of Jews in Sweden can be traced from the 17th century, when their presence is verified in the baptism records of the Stockholm Cathedral. Several Jewish families were baptised into the Lutheran Church, a requirement for permission to settle in Sweden. In 1681, for example, 28 members of the families of Israel Mandel and Moses Jacob were baptised in the Stockholm German Church in the presence of King Charles XI of Sweden, the dowager queen Hedvig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp, and several other high state officials.
Antisemitic tropes, also known as antisemitic canards or antisemitic libels, are "sensational reports, misrepresentations or fabrications" about Jews as an ethnicity or Judaism as a religion.
Historians continue to study and debate the extent of antisemitism in American history and how American antisemitism has similarities and distinctions with its European counterpart.
Antisemitism, the prejudice or discrimination against Jews, has had a long history since the ancient times. While antisemitism had already been prevalent in ancient Greece and Roman Empire, its institutionalization in European Christianity after the destruction of the ancient Jewish cultural center in Jerusalem caused two millennia of segregation, expulsions, persecutions, pogroms, genocides of Jews, which culminated in the 20th-century Holocaust in Nazi German-occupied European states, where 67% European Jews were murdered.
Antisemitism has long existed in the United States. Most Jewish community relations agencies in the United States draw distinctions between antisemitism, which is measured in terms of attitudes and behaviors, and the security and status of American Jews, which are both measured by the occurrence of specific incidents. FBI data shows that in every year since 1991, Jews were the most frequent victims of religiously motivated hate crimes. The number of hate crimes against Jews may be underreported, as in the case for many other targeted groups.
Antisemitic incidents escalated worldwide in frequency and intensity during the Gaza War, and were widely considered to be a wave of reprisal attacks in response to the conflict.
Antisemitism in Canada is the manifestation of hatred, hostility, harm, prejudice or discrimination against the Canadian Jewish people or Judaism as a religious, ethnic or racial group. Some of the first Jewish settlers in Canada arrived in Montreal in the 1760s, among them was Aaron Hart who is considered the father of Canadian Jewry. His son Ezekiel Hart experience one of the first well documented cases of antisemitism in Canada. Hart was repeatedly stopped from taking his seat in the Quebec legislature due to his Jewish faith, as members claimed he could not take the oath of office, which included the phrase "on the true faith of a Christian".
Antisemitism in France has become heightened since the late 20th century and into the 21st century. In the early 21st century, most Jews in France, like most Muslims in France, are of North African origin. France has the largest population of Jews in the diaspora after the United States—an estimated 500,000–600,000 persons. Paris has the highest population, followed by Marseille, which has 70,000 Jews. Expressions of antisemitism were seen to rise during the Six-Day War of 1967 and the French anti-Zionist campaign of the 1970s and 1980s. Following the electoral successes achieved by the extreme right-wing National Front and an increasing denial of the Holocaust among some persons in the 1990s, surveys showed an increase in stereotypical antisemitic beliefs among the general French population.
British Jews have experienced antisemitism – discrimination and persecution as Jews – since a Jewish community was first established in England in 1070. They experienced a series of massacres in the Medieval period, which culminated in their expulsion from England in 1290. They were readmitted by Oliver Cromwell in 1655. By the 1800s, an increasing toleration of religious minorities gradually helped to eliminate legal restrictions on public employment and political representation. However, Jewish financiers were seen by some as holding disproportionate influence on British government policy, particularly concerning the British Empire and foreign affairs.
Evidence for the presence of Jewish communities in the geographical area today covered by Austria can be traced back to the 12th century. In 1848 Jews were granted civil rights and the right to establish an autonomous religious community, but full citizenship rights were given only in 1867. In an atmosphere of economic, religious and social freedom, the Jewish population grew from 6,000 in 1860 to almost 185,000 in 1938. In March 1938, Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany and thousands of Austrians and Austrian Jews who opposed Nazi rule were sent to concentration camps. Of the 65,000 Viennese Jews deported to concentration camps, only about 2,000 survived, while around 800 survived World War II in hiding.
Antisemitism in Australia is the manifestation of hostility, violence, prejudice or discrimination against the Jewish people or Judaism as a religious, ethnic or racial group. This form of racism has affected Jews since Australia's Jewish community was established in the 18th century, becoming more pronounced in the late 19th century, rising further in the 20th and early 21st centuries. There are a number of organisations that track antisemitic activities, including the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, that publish an annual list of all reported antisemitic activities. According to the Anti-Defamation League's 2014 Global100 survey, an estimated 14% of Australians harbour antisemitic views. In 2025, this percentage rose to 20%. Antisemitism in Australia is perpetrated by a variety of groups, and it has manifested in attacks on Australian Jews and their religious and communal institutions, in antisemitic publications, and in efforts to prevent Jewish immigration. Recent surges, particularly after the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel, highlight its ongoing presence. Advocacy by Jewish organisations, legislative measures, and condemnation by political leaders illustrate efforts to combat these issues, yet antisemitism remains a persistent societal concern.
Belgium is a European country with a Jewish population of approximately 35,000 out of a total population of about 11.4 million. It is among the countries experiencing an increase in both antisemitic attitudes and in physical attacks on Jews.
Antisemitism is a growing problem in 21st-century Germany.
Since 7 October 2023, numerous violent incidents prompted by the Hamas attack on Israel and the ensuing Gaza war have been reported worldwide. They have accompanied a sharp increase in global antisemitism and Islamophobia, as well as anti-Israeli sentiment and anti-Palestinian sentiment or broader anti-Arab sentiment. Other people and groups have also been targeted, such as the Sikhs, who are commonly mistaken to be Muslims by their attackers.
Antisemitism on social media can manifest in various forms such as emojis, GIFs, memes, comments, and reactions to content. Studies have categorized antisemitic discourse into different types: hate speech, calls for violence, dehumanization, conspiracy theories and Holocaust denial.
Jews have faced antisemitism and discrimination in universities and campuses in the United States, from the founding of universities in the Thirteen Colonies until the present day in varying intensities. From the early 20th century, and until the 1960s, indirect quotas were placed on Jewish admissions, quotas were first placed on Jews by elite universities such Columbia, Harvard and Yale and were prevalent as late as the 1960s in universities such as Stanford. These quotas disappeared in the 1970s.