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Antisemitism

Follow the latest Antisemitism news, videos, analysis and opinion from Jewish News Syndicate (JNS).

The worst grades went to the networking sites AnonUp, Gab and 8Kun, as well as the video platform Brighteon, all of which received an “F.”
The Hungarian Jewish community is the largest in East-Central Europe with an estimated 100,000 members.
The painting has been hanging in the Musée d’Orsay in Paris as part of the national collection since 1980, when it was acquired by the state via auction from a gallery in Zurich.
“No other country on this planet, other than the United States and Israel, has had more of a direct impact on my life than France,” said American Jewish Committee CEO David Harris.
In the first of a planned series of working meetings with European leaders, Israeli President Reuven Rivlin and his German counterpart, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, discuss Iran, the ICC, COVID-19 and more.
Responding to the International Criminal Court’s decision to investigate actions made by the Israel Defense Forces—calling them “war crimes”—Professor Boaz Ganor tells JNS that modern terrorists have adapted their activities to exploit the constraints of combat faced by liberal democratic states.
Seven Jewish students testified in front of the student government regarding personal encounters with anti-Semitism.
Michael Spence, president of University College London, acknowledged free speech but seemed to draw a limit when it comes to some subjects.
“Rising anti-Semitism around the world demands we act with additional tools and increase cooperation with the international community,” says Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Gilad Erdan.
Prague’s move is “a blatant attack on the Palestinian people and their rights,” says the P.A. Foreign Ministry • “East Jerusalem is occupied land under international law,” claims the Arab League secretary-general.
“Acts of hate like this are disgraceful and cowardly; that swastikas vandalized a home of Jewish students is especially reprehensible,” university leaders wrote in a joint statement.
The man, identified as Harry S., was accused of having “aided and abetted [the] murder [of] several hundred [people]” at the Stutthof camp in Nazi-occupied Poland where roughly 65,000 people died during the Holocaust.