Huge rise in antisemitic abuse in UK since Hamas
attack, says charity
589% increase in number of incidents described as
‘watershed moment for antisemitism in the UK’
Harriet
Sherwood
@harrietsherwood
Thu 15 Feb
2024 00.01 GMT
The scale
of the surge in antisemitism in the UK since Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7
October has been revealed, in data showing a 589% increase in the number of
incidents compared with the same period in 2022.
The
Community Security Trust (CST), which monitors anti-Jewish abuse and attacks
and provides security for UK Jewish communities, said the unprecedented
increase was a “watershed moment for antisemitism in the UK”.
It recorded
4,103 antisemitic incidents in the UK in 2023, the highest total in a calendar
year reported to the organisation. Two-thirds of the 2023 incidents occurred
after 7 October – 2,699, compared with 392 over the same time period in 2022.
James
Cleverly, the home secretary, said the rise in anti-Jewish hatred and abuse was
“utterly deplorable”, and Yvette Cooper, his Labour counterpart, said it was a
“stain on our society”.
The CST
said Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October was a “trigger event [that] had a
seismic effect on antisemitic incident levels in the UK … and the impact was
instant”.
It received
the first report of antisemitism at 12.55pm on 7 October after Hamas’s attack.
A vehicle with a Palestinian flag attached, and with the occupant shaking their
fist in the air through an open window, had driven past a synagogue in
Hertfordshire. Thirty-one incidents were reported on that day.
The number
rose over the following days, reaching a peak of 80 on 11 October – the highest
incident total for any single day recorded by the CST.
The CST
pointed out that there had been previous spikes in antisemitism during and
after conflicts in Gaza in 2021, 2014 and 2009.
It said:
“There is one key difference this time: antisemitic incidents skyrocketed in
the immediate aftermath of a terror attack responsible for the highest Jewish
death toll on any day since the Holocaust, before Israel had coordinated any
substantive military response.”
The
organisation recorded a sharp rise in the number of incidents of anti-Jewish
hatred and abuse in schools and universities.
In 2023,
there were 87 incidents recorded at Jewish schools, compared with 20 the year
before. A further 111 incidents involved Jewish children away from school,
compared with 41 in 2022, and 127 involving Jewish children or staff at
non-faith schools.
The number
of incidents at universities and other higher education institutions also broke
records in 2023, with 182 recorded compared with 60 the previous year.
The CST
said the most frequent form of antisemitic rhetoric in 2023 “either referenced
or was linked to Israel, Palestine, the Hamas terror attack or the subsequent
war”. Between 1 January and 6 October, 19% of reported incidents included
“Israel-related antisemitism”; between 7 October and 31 December, the
proportion rose to 56%.
“In at
least 427 instances, the phrase ‘Free Palestine’ was employed in speech or
writing. Although not an inherently antisemitic statement, in each of these
cases it was targeted at Jewish people or institutions simply because they were
Jewish, or formed part of a larger tirade including overtly anti-Jewish
sentiments,” the CST said.
The phrase
had “become a formalised, almost anthemic slogan of anti-Jewish abuse, which
offenders know will offend or intimidate their target”, said its report.
The types
of incidents recorded include assault (up 96% on 2022) damage and desecration
of Jewish property (up 146%), threats (up 196%) and abusive behaviour (up
149%). Online antisemitism rose by 257%.
Conspiracy
theories were evident in 319 of the 4,103 incidents reported in 2023, almost
double the 2022 figure. The vast majority “spoke of malign Jewish power over
global politics, media, finance and other walks of life”.
Incidents
were concentrated in areas with significant Jewish populations. These “remain
the principal targets of antisemitism”, says the report, but “for the first
time ever, CST recorded an antisemitic incident in every single police region
in the UK in 2023”.
Mark
Gardner, the chief executive of the CST, said: “British Jews are strong and
resilient, but the explosion in hatred against our community is an absolute
disgrace. It occurs in schools, universities, workplaces, on the streets and
all over social media.
“Our
community is being harassed, intimidated, threatened and attacked by extremists
who also oppose society as a whole. We thank the government and police for
their support, but this is a challenge for everyone and we condemn the stony
silence from those sections of society that eagerly call out racism in every
other case, except when it comes to Jew hate.”
Cleverly
said the government had taken “strong steps to confront” antisemitism,
including increasing funding for security at Jewish schools and synagogues and
“working with the police to ensure that hate crime and expressions of support
for the terrorist organisation Hamas are met with the full force of the law”.
Cooper
said: “We must not allow events unfolding internationally to play out in
increased hatred and prejudice here in our communities. These record high
levels are an urgent reminder of the responsibility on all of us to stamp out
the scourge of antisemitism wherever it is found.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário