Reported antisemitic incidents reached all-time high in 2022, ADL says

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NEW YORK — (NEW YORK) -- Just days after a new report revealed antisemitic incidents reached an all-time high in 2022, a new ad campaign calling on non-Jewish people to condemn such discrimination crossed millions of Americans' TV screens.

The Anti-Defamation League found antisemitic incidents increased by more than 30% in 2022 compared to 2021, according to a report published last month. The anti-hate and anti-bias advocacy group counted 3,697 antisemitic incidents in 2022 -- the highest total since the ADL began tabulating those incidents in 1979, according to group's March report.

Some organizations announced they were taking action following the report's release. On March 27, New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, donning a blue lapel pin on his blazer, announced the The Foundation to Combat Antisemitism's"Stand Up to Jewish Hate" campaign, slated to air on national television.

When asked whether the SPLC has tracked a similar rise in antisemitic incidents, Corke said that while the SPLC does not track specific events, statistics from the ADL along with other data from the SPLC show"that there's been a shift to more public spectacle, that there's more hateful incidents that are intersecting people in their daily lives."

Another public spectacle of antisemitism: graffiti on Jewish institutions. In October, Ben and Esther's Vegan Jewish Deli in Portland, Oregon, was vandalized with a swastika. Corke noted that hate crimes are often underreported, as police departments are not required to report hate crimes to the federal government. She noted the rise in hate crimes against one group is often indicative of discrimination on the rise more broadly, such as the increased harassment against Asian Americans since the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The rise of antisemitic incidents requires the appropriate attention to be fully understood, Snider and Corke said.

 

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