Antisemitism
Follow the latest Antisemitism news, videos, and analysis from Jewish News Syndicate (JNS).
After the principal bungled an apology, the Bloomfield Hills School District cited “an increase in incidents related to both our Jewish and Muslim student body” but wouldn’t elaborate.
The World Jewish Congress president wrote to the U.S. president: “Only you can stop this rising tide of hatred against the Jewish people.”
The rapper with a long history of antisemitic vitriol wrote on Instagram that he had a change of heart after watching a Jonah Hill film.
A bipartisan group seeks $2 million—a 33% increase—for the special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism in the next fiscal budget.
The “dramatic increase” of antisemitism is not attributable to a single ideology or cause, per the ADL.
M. Carey Thomas’ actions “impacted prospective students of color and Jewish students who were excluded from the college,” it stated.
Digital terror, hate ‘report card’ shows social media fails to police antisemitism, Holocaust denial
“What this report card shows us are that those seeds of hate are the precursors to physical violence,” Eric Dinowitz, chair of the New York City Council’s Jewish Caucus, tells JNS.
Even as they bring contemporary politics into the story, museums tend to overlook the antisemitism that divided Impressionists over the Dreyfus Affair in the late 19th century.
In his recent clash with Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colo.), Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) flip-flops on the question of whether antisemitism is a unique challenge.
The New York nonprofit’s staff will undergo training on antisemitism as part of a settlement
Although the state requires instruction about the Holocaust, “being Jewish should not be a World War II lesson,” a sixth-grader testified before the state legislature.
Pew statistics show Americans view Jews, Protestants, Catholics more favorably than Muslims, Mormons
“This survey confirms what we have found repeatedly over the past decade, which is that on the whole, Jews are among the most positively regarded religious groups in America,” Alan Cooperman, director of religion research at Pew Research Center, told JNS.