Anti-Semitism around the world reached record highs in 2018, according to a new report released Sunday by Israel's Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, to coincide with International Holocaust Memorial Day.
The 2018 Global Anti-Semitism Report details anti-Jewish sentiment worldwide, and presents the Disapora Ministry's major initiatives to combat and monitor anti-Semitism around the world.
According to the report, 13 Jews were killed in three separate deadly anti-Semitic attacks in 2018, which the ministry says is the highest number of Jewish fatalities in racially motivated attacks since the Argentine Jewish community was targeted in the 1990s.
Presenting the report to the cabinet on Sunday, Diaspora Affairs Minister Naftali Bennett highlighted the rise in attacks on Jews around the world, and urged nations to act against the phenomenon.
"The year 2018 saw record highs of anti-Semitism in the streets, online, and in the political arena, around the world," Bennett said. "The Ministry of Diaspora Affairs will continue to work to build bridges with Jews around the world, and to eradicate anti-Semitism through legal, diplomatic and public diplomacy channels. Especially this week, when the world marks International Holocaust Memorial Day, I call on governments around the world to act: rid your societies of anti-Semitism, and take harsh stance against the hatred of Jews."
The report also found a direct link between anti-Semitic attacks and anti-Israel sentiment, saying that "70% of anti-Jewish attacks were anti-Israel in nature." It said anti-Jewish incitement was at its height during the May 2018 move of the American embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and during the frequently violent Hamas-led protests at the Gazan border fence with Israel.
The report also highlighted anti-Semitic attacks in Europe, in particular the UK, where it said such incidents "have reached an all-time recorded high." The report also pointed the finger at repeated allegations of anti-Semitism in the Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn, which it said had led " significant numbers in the Jewish community express deep concern for their future in the country."
The document also cited a European Union survey that found that 85% of European Jews believed anti-Semitism to be a problem in their countries and that 89% of respondents thought there had been a rise in anti-Semitism in their countries in the last five years. As a result, the survey found, 38% of European Jews had considered or were considering leaving the countries in which they lived.
Global anti-Semitism report: 2018 saw most deadly attacks on Jews in 25 years : http://bit.ly/2Wp1uXc
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