Report counts sharp spike in global anti-Semitism

The report found there were 766 recorded incidents against Jewish people in 2014 — the worst year for attacks since 2009.

A woman lights candles in front of the Hyper Cacher kosher supermarket at the Porte de Vincennes in Paris on January 21, 2015. Four people were killed in a hostage-taking situation during an attack by an Islamist militant on January 9, 2015. Photo courtesy of REUTERS/Charles Platiau
Editors: This photo may only be republished with RNS-SEMITISM-SPIKE, originally transmitted on April 15, 2015.
A woman lights candles in front of the Hyper Cacher kosher supermarket at the Porte de Vincennes in Paris on January 21, 2015. Four people were killed in a hostage-taking situation during an attack by an Islamist militant on January 9, 2015. Photo courtesy of REUTERS/Charles Platiau Editors: This photo may only be republished with RNS-SEMITISM-SPIKE, originally transmitted on April 15, 2015.

A woman lights candles in front of the Hyper Cacher kosher supermarket at the Porte de Vincennes in Paris on Jan. 21, 2015. Four people were killed in a hostage-taking situation during an attack by an Islamist militant on Jan. 9, 2015. Photo courtesy of REUTERS/Charles Platiau
Editors: This photo may only be republished with RNS-SEMITISM-SPIKE, originally transmitted on April 15, 2015.

The number of violent anti-Semitic attacks around the world surged nearly 40 percent last year, according to a report released Wednesday by researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel.

The report found there were 766 recorded incidents against Jewish people in 2014 — the worst year for attacks since 2009. It was released ahead of Israel commemorating Holocaust Remembrance Day, which began Wednesday (April 15) at sundown.


The attacks were “perpetrated with or without weapons and by arson, vandalism or direct threats against Jewish persons or institutions such as synagogues, community centers, schools, cemeteries and monuments as well as private property,” the authors of the report, based at the Kantor Center at Tel Aviv University, said.

In 2013, there were 554 registered incidents.

“The overall feeling among many Jewish people is one of living in an intensifying anti-Jewish environment that has become not only insulting and threatening, but outright dangerous, and that they are facing an explosion of hatred towards them as individuals, their communities, and Israel, as a Jewish state,” the study said.

There was a sharp rise in the number of incidents seen in the United Kingdom (141 in 2014, compared to 95 in 2013), Australia (30 vs. 11), Germany (76 vs. 36), Austria (9 vs. 4), Italy (23 vs. 12), and Sweden (17 vs. 3).

However, the highest number of violent cases recorded in 2014 was in France, which saw 164 incidences, up from 141 in 2013. In recent years, the country has consistently seen the most reported cases of anti-Semitic violence worldwide, the report said. In January, four people were killed at a kosher supermarket during a terrorist attack in Paris.

Earlier this month, Roger Cukierman, the president of Crif, a Paris-based organization that represents Jewish-French organizations, told USA TODAY that as incidences of anti-Semitic violence there have risen, Jewish people have been left pondering their future in the nation.

“If you are a father or mother and you bring your children to school that is like a fortress protected by police and the army with machine guns you may have doubts about whether you want these kids to remain in such an environment,” said Cukierman, referring to security efforts by French authorities to protect its Jewish-French citizens after the Paris attacks.


France has the largest Jewish population outside of Israel and the United States, with about 475,000, or just over 3 percent, of the world’s Jewish population, according to the Jewish Virtual Library, an online resource. That compares to about 5.7 million in the U.S. — home to 40 percent of the world’s Jews — and just over 6 million in Israel.

The report identified a number of different reasons for the spike in attacks last year, including the conflict last summer in Gaza between Hamas and Israel as well as a “general climate of hatred and violence” that has accompanied the sudden rise of Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq. The attacks in Paris were not counted as part of the report because they occurred this year.

A separate study released this week in Israel found that the children of Holocaust survivors are more likely to fear the threat of Iran developing a nuclear weapon than the children of parents who were not directly affected by that event.

(Kim Hjelmgaard writes for USA Today.)

KRE END HJELMGAARD

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