New Study Shows Anti-Semitism Soared Last Year

And it's only gotten worse early in 2017, according to the Anti-Defamation League
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Harassment, vandalism and other hostile acts against Jewish people and sites in the U.S. increased by 34 percent last year and are up 86 percent through the first three months of 2017, according to data released on Monday.

A spate of bomb threats against Jewish community centers and schools, and vandalism at Jewish cemeteries in the U.S. this year have contributed to the surge, according to the Anti-Defamation League’s report.

There have been more than 100 bomb threats against 75 Jewish community centers and eight Jewish day schools around the country this year through early March. Vandals have toppled headstones and inflicted other damage at Jewish graveyards in St. Louis, Philadelphia and other cities this year. A swastika made from feces besmirched an art school bathroom in Rhode Island. 

“What the data tells us is incontrovertible and why the Jewish community describes such heightened anxiety,” ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt told The Huffington Post. “There’s no doubt that there’s a high degree of anxiety.”

Greenblatt added that his organization’s report, which was released on Holocaust Remembrance Day, shows that public officials must do more to denounce anti-Semitism and find ways to make Jewish-Americans feel secure.

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Vandalized tombstones are seen at the Jewish Mount Carmel Cemetery, Feb. 26, 2017, in Philadelphia, PA. Police say more than 100 tombstones were vandalized a week after a Jewish cemetery in St. Louis was desecrated.
DOMINICK REUTER via Getty Images

In all, the ADL documented 1,266 incidents in 2016 and 541 since the beginning of this year until March. That’s a sharp increase since 2013, when the ADL recorded 751 incidents, the fewest number since record keeping began in 1979, a spokesman said. For comparison, anti-Semitic incidents peaked in 1994 when there were more than 2,000 incidents reported for the first and only time.

The ADL’s analysis excluded most bigoted acts on social media. However, it included the harassment of Jewish residents in Whitefish, Montana, because the coordinated abuse rose above typical taunting and hate speech online, an ADL spokesman said. Supporters of alt-right figurehead Richard Spencer targeted town activists and Jewish residents after Spencer’s mother, a Whitefish business owner, said she was harassed because of her son’s politics.  

While forms of harassment and vandalism have jumped since 2015, the ADL said that physical assaults fell 36 percent in 2016 and are down 40 percent this year. 

Listen below to a recording of one of the bomb threats obtained by the Jewish Telegraph Agency:

The first significant growth in anti-Semitism occurred in March 2016, based on the ADL’s tally. Monthly records peaked in November last year and have remained elevated through March.  

Massachusetts and Colorado witnessed some of the sharpest increases in rates of incidents among U.S. states. The ADL counted 125 cases in Massachusetts last year, compared to 50 in 2015 while they climbed from 18 to 45 in Colorado. Florida, with a large Jewish population, experienced 137 incidents, a 50 percent increase. California had 211 cases, the most of any state in 2016, while New York is on pace to have nearly 400 this year.

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Anti-Defamation League

Despite the clear increase in incidents, it’s difficult to explain what’s causing the upswing. 

Greenblatt said the ADL has tracked a resurgence of neo-Nazi and other hate groups in recent years and noticed that extremists felt emboldened during the presidential election. Trolls on social media, for instance, relentlessly battered Jewish journalists

In many bigoted incidents since the Election Day, alleged perpetrators have mentioned Donald Trump

“Anti-Semitism is horrible, and it’s going to stop and has to stop,” Trump said in January after pressure mounted for him to address the rising tide of acts targeting Jewish people.

“As so often before, rising antisemitism is a symptom of a much larger social pathology,” said Jonathan Sarna, a professor of American Jewish history at Brandeis University, in an email to HuffPost. “Leaders model behavior for the general public, and therefore when our leaders speak insensitively, when they seem to generalize about religious and racial groups, when they ignore or brush aside hate speech, it comes as no surprise that members of the public follow their example.”

The unease felt by in Jewish communities perhaps could relent if recent law enforcement investigations prove to have rooted out the culprits. Authorities charged a Jewish teenager in Israel on Thursday for allegedly making an unspecified number of bomb threats against sites in the U.S. A former journalist was accused last month of threatening eight Jewish institutions. 

The uptick in anti-Jewish incidents fits into a pattern of increased hostility towards other minorities in the U.S. 

The FBI found that there had been a 67 percent increase in hate crimes against Muslims in 2015, the most recent year that data is available. Hate crimes against African-Americans, who are most frequently the victims of such crimes according to the FBI’s report, rose by 7.6 percent that year. 

More recent FBI stats aren’t available but there have been a series of high-profile crimes against minorities this year. A man in a Kansas bar shot two Indian men, one fatally, after yelling “Get out of my country.” There have been 35 threats against mosques this year, according to the Council on American-Islamic Relations, and arsonists started fires at three Islamic places of worship.

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Before You Go

Martin Luther King and Jewish Leaders
Julius Rosenwald(01 of10)
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Julius Rosenwald is a philanthropist and former part-owner of Sears, Roebuck and Company who lived before the civil rights era but used his personal wealth to advance the lives of young black Americans. Together with Booker T. Washington, he hatched an ambitious plan to build over 5,000 public schools for black students in the Jim Crow South. Many famous African Americans have graduated from these “Rosenwald” schools, including late poet Maya Angelou and U.S. Representative John Lewis. (credit:Buyenlarge via Getty Images)
Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel(02 of10)
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Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel’s early experience of both anti-Semitism and apathy in Nazi Germany set the tone for the rest of his life. He was an expert in the study of the biblical prophets, and used their examples as inspiration to speak out clearly against injustice and inequality. Heschel met Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1963 during a Chicago conference on race and religion. The two struck up a friendship, and on March 21, 1965, Heschel joined forces with Dr. King for the historic march from Selma. He said later that he felt as if his “legs were praying." (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(03 of10)
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(credit:William Lovelace via Getty Images)
Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath(04 of10)
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Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath is seen to the right of Dr. King, holding the torah during a silent prayer protest against the Vietnam War. Dr. King was a staunch opponent of the Vietnam War, believing that U.S. presence in Southeast Asia smacked of imperialism and diverted money and resources away from the black poor. In a letter to King about Vietnam, Eisendrath wrote: “You have not only my unswerving admiration, my fondest wishes, and my prayers. You have my whole-hearted support and deeply felt pledge of cooperation and assistance in this painful but imperative task of seeking peace and justice for all the creatures of God.” (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Rabbi Joachim Prinz(05 of10)
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In this image, civil rights leaders meet with President John F. Kennedy in the oval office of the White House after the March on Washington D.C. From left to right, they are Willard Wirtz (Secretary of Labour), Floyd McKissick (CORE), Mathew Ahmann (National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice), Whitney Young (National Urban League), Martin Luther King, Jr. (SCLC), John Lewis (SNCC), Rabbi Joachim Prinz (American Jewish Congress), A. Philip Randolph, with Reverend Eugene Carson Blake partially visible behind him, President John F. Kennedy, Walter Reuther (labour leader), with Vice President Lyndon Johnson partially visible behind him.

Rabbi Joachim Prinz fled from Nazi Germany in 1937 and resettled in America. He was active in the Jewish community in Newark, New Jersey, and eventually became the President of the American Jewish Congress. He participated in the March on Washington, coming to the podium just before Dr. King’s famous “I Have A Dream” speech.
During his address, Prinz told the gathered crowd, “When I was the rabbi of the Jewish community in Berlin under the Hitler regime, I learned many things. The most important thing that I learned under those tragic circumstances was that bigotry and hatred are not the most urgent problem. The most urgent, the most disgraceful, the most shameful and the most tragic problem is silence."
(credit:Universal History Archive via Getty Images)
Rabbi Israel Dresner(06 of10)
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Three of 10 freedom riders on trial at Tallahassee, Fla., for unlawful assembly talk to each other during a court recess on Thursday, June 22, 1961 in Tallahassee, Fla. The riders were charged following an attempt to integrate the city airport restaurant on June 15-16. Talking are (from left) Rabbi Israel Dresner of Springfield, N.J., one of two Jewish leaders in the group; the Rev. A.L. Hardge of New Britain, Conn., one of three African Americans; and the Rev. Robert Storm of New York City, one of five white protestant ministers.

Rabbi Israel Dresner has been called “the most arrested rabbi in America.” He was one of the Tallahassee Ten, a group of Freedom Riders who were arrested in 1961 for trying to eat at a segregated airport restaurant in Tallahassee, Florida. He returned to Florida in 1964 to serve out a brief jail term, before proudly eating at the same restaurant that had refused the group years earlier.
(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(07 of10)
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(credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Rabbi Martin Freedman(08 of10)
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Known as the “Renaissance Rabbi,” Rabbi Martin Freedman (far right) was also one of the Tallahassee Ten. Freedman and Rabbi Israel Dresner (next to him) are taken to the Tallahassee city building where they were charged with unlawful assembly after they and ten other 'Freedom Riders' were arrested attempting to eat at the Tallahassee airport. (credit:Bettmann/Corbis)
Rabbi Jacob M. Rothschild(09 of10)
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After serving Jewish congregations in the North, Rabbi Jacob Rothschild took up a position at The Temple synagogue in Atlanta, Georgia, and was “immediately disturbed” by the racism and segregation he saw in the community around him. For years, The Temple’s leadership had avoided confrontation with their pro-segregationist neighbors about racism. Rothschild changed that by using his pulpit to preach about racial justice and joining local interfaith organizations. The Temple was bombed on October 12, 1958, which only served to increase Rothschild’s resolution to fight for integration. (credit:William Lovelace/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Rabbi Perry Nussbaum(10 of10)
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As a rabbi in the Jackson Mississippi, Perry Nussbaum faced immense pressure from his white neighbors and even from his congregants to stay quiet about racism in order to avoid drawing the attention of the local Ku Klux Klan. Nussbaum became more outspoken after waves of freedom riders arrived in his town in the summer of 1961 to protest segregation, becoming a chaplain to protesters who had been jailed. He went on to organize fundraising drives to rebuild churches. In 1967, his synagogue and his home were bombed. In this image, Nussbaum is talking to journalists on November 22, 1967, just one day after the bombing, in the living room of his house. Boarded-up windows can be seen behind him. (credit:Bettmann/CORBIS)