Poll: American Jews report increasing incidents of anti-Semitism, mostly online

More than 60% of American Jews said they experienced or heard anti-Semitic comments, slurs or threats, up from 54% a year earlier.

Neighbors gather to show their support of the community near a rabbi's residence in Monsey, New York, on Dec. 29, 2019, after a stabbing during a Hanukkah celebration. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

(RNS) — More than half of American Jews continue to experience or witness anti-Semitic incidents in the form of comments, slurs or threats, according to a new poll released by the Anti-Defamation League on Wednesday (March 31).

The poll, conducted in January by YouGov, also reveals that 9% of American Jews reported being physically attacked in the last five years.

The poll is the second in a row conducted by YouGov for the ADL and it shows a slight uptick in anti-Semitic incidents, with 63% of respondents saying they had experienced or heard anti-Semitic comments, slurs or threats targeting others, up from 54% a year earlier.



RELATED: He claimed white Jews gained from white supremacy. Now he’s more popular than ever.


Graphic courtesy of ADL

Graphic courtesy of ADL

“In the aftermath of major antisemitic attacks in Pittsburgh, Poway, Jersey City and Monsey, American Jews are reporting that they feel less safe in the U.S. today than they were just a decade earlier,” said the ADL’s chief executive officer, Jonathan Greenblatt, referring to the fatal shooting and stabbing of Jews in those cities in 2018 and 2019.

In the past year, many of the anti-Semitic incidents took place online, with 36% saying they had experienced some form of online harassment, mostly on Facebook. Most Jews said they had been called offensive names, but 13% said they were physically threatened online. The poll showed the vast majority of Americans want online platforms to better address harassment and make it easier to report hateful content.

Jewish vulnerability, which had gone down in the decades after World War II, is up dramatically, with 59% of Jewish Americans saying they feel less safe in the U.S. today than they were a decade ago.

And nearly half (49%) reported being afraid of a violent attack at a synagogue. Most synagogues in the U.S. beefed up security in the wake of the Pittsburgh massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue that killed 11 Jews.

The survey of 503 Jewish American adults over the age of 18 was conducted Jan. 7-15 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points.



READ: In a Ukrainian librarian’s matzo, a story of Passover freedom


 

Donate to Support Independent Journalism!

Donate Now!