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US Jews hiding religious identity, don’t feel safe, per ‘Washington Post’ poll

Some 42% of respondents said they don’t wear or otherwise display identifiable Jewish symbols, up from 26% who said they hid their Jewish identity in a November 2023 AJC poll.

Jewish Star, Magen David
A Star of David. Photo by Cottonbro Studio/Pexels.

Four in 10 Jewish Americans say they try to hide their religious identity, according to a new Washington Post poll that also reported almost one in three respondents saying they don’t feel safe as a Jew in the United States.

In the survey, 42% of respondents said they do not wear, carry or display anything in public that could identify them as Jewish, with 58% saying they do. In an American Jewish Committee poll taken in November 2023, a month after Oct. 7, just 26% said they hid their Jewish identity, while 73% said they did not.

Almost one-third of Jewish Americans (31%) said they did not feel safe, while 69% said they did.

By 95% to 5%, respondents said that there was more antisemitism in the United States, and 85% said there was a lot of or some antisemitism at college campuses, with 15% saying there was little or none.

In the poll, which was conducted before U.S. President Donald Trump helped broker a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, just 29% of Jewish Americans approved of his performance in office, with 71% disapproving. By 65% to 35%, they said that he did not understand the concerns of American Jews.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also received low marks, with 68% expressing negative views of his leadership and just 32% saying it was positive.

Respondents deadlocked over the way that the Jewish state conducted the war, with 48% disapproving of Israel’s military action and 46% approving. By 61% to 29%, they said that Israel committed war crimes, but a far greater percentage (94%) said that Hamas is guilty of war crimes. Just 2% said they believed the terrorist group did not commit such crimes.

By 68% to 32%, respondents blamed Hamas, which operates in civilian areas and began the war, and not Israel, for the number of civilian casualties. Asked if Israel committed genocide in Gaza, a majority (51%) said no, while 39% said yes.

The poll of 815 Jewish Americans was conducted Sept. 2-9 with a margin of error of plus or minus 4.7 percentage points.

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