Antisemitism is expected to rise significantly around the world in 2021
Ministry decries ‘first institutional threat to Jewish religious freedom in Europe since the Holocaust'.
A float featuring antisemitic caricatures at the Aalst Carnival parade in Belgium on March 2
(photo credit: FJC)
Antisemitism is expected to rise sharply around the world as a result of conspiracy theories against Jews and the State of Israel regarding the COV id-19 pandemic, the Diaspora Affairs Ministry’s annual antisemitism report has sa id.
According to the ministry’s new report, the main front forum for the expression of antisemitism in 2020 changed from the physical realm to the online one.
The new report notes that 2020 witnessed a sharp increase in the dissemination of antisemitism online, including what appears to be an Iranian campaign to compare the Jewish state to a viral pandemic by launching the Twitter hashtag COV id48, a reference to 1948, the year Israel was established.
Despite this, the report stated that there had been a drop in the number of antisemitic posts on social media, due to steps taken by the main social media companies which has caused antisemitic users to migrate to other platforms with less oversight.
Data from the ministry’s monitoring systems showed a 50 percent decrease in the number of antisemitic posts on Twitter between 2018 and 2020.
The 140 page document also noted an increase in antisemitism in the US, caused by the coronavirus crisis in the country, political polarization surrounding the pres idential election, the dissemination of various conspiracy theories, and the racial justice protests following the police killing of George Floyd.
As well as noting concern in the US, the ministry report observed the problems of far-right antisemitism in Germany, where it sa id that authorities have conducted 380 legal measures against far-right activists in German police forces.
cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ player id: ’36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b’ }).render(‘4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6’); });
if(window.location.pathname.indexOf(‘656089’) != -1){console.log(‘hedva connatix’);document.getElementsBy className(‘divConnatix’)[0]. style.display =’none’;}
Investigators found ev idence that police officers put on Nazi uniforms and symbols and exposed “many scandals related to antisemitism and racism in the ranks of the German police.”
The document also highlighted the recent ruling by the European Court of Justice which upheld a ban by the Flanders regional government in Belgium on religious slaughter without stunning, a ban which makes the production of kosher meat impossible.
The ministry report asserts that the EU court ruling represents “an institutional threat to Jewish religious freedom in Europe for the first time since the Holocaust,” adding that hunting continues to be legal in the European Union.
“The ruling represents a dangerous precedent and raises concerns about other restrictions such as circumcising boys,” the report stated.
“For thousands of years, the Jewish people were the scape goat for the ills of the world and unfortunately antisemitism has not skipped over the current pandemic,” sa id Diaspora Affairs Minister Omer Yankelevitch.
“If antisemitism is a global phenomenon then the war against it must also be global,” she continued and called for a “determined and uncompromising struggle to defeat this plague.’