ADL
[link removed]
View in browser
[link removed]
2019 was an unprecedented year.
ADL recorded a 12% rise in incidents over the previous year — an average of six antisemitic incidents occurred in the U.S. every day. This added up to the largest number recorded in ADL’s 40 years of tracking antisemitic incidents in the U.S. We saw vicious and lethal antisemitic attacks against communities in Poway, Jersey City and Monsey, and a spree of violent assaults in Brooklyn.
Antisemitic incidents declined overall in the District of Columbia, Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia in 2019, bucking a national trend that saw total incidents in the United States reach an all-time high. The Washington, D.C. region experienced a total of 87 incidents combined.
Meanwhile, ADL saw a 12 percent decrease nationally in antisemitic incidents targeting Jewish institutions, but in the Washington, D.C. region, ADL’s regional office reported a 50 percent increase in such incidents (10 in 2018 to 15 in 2019) from the previous year.
As we endure the COVID-19 pandemic, 2019 seems like the distant past. Much about our lives right now is very different than it was then. But antisemitism and other forms of hate continue. In fact, an antisemitic trope from the Middle Ages has reemerged: scapegoating the Jews for causing the plague.
ADL remains committed to fighting back against the rising tide of antisemitism. With your help, we will double down on our work with elected leaders, schools, and communities to end the cycle of hatred.
If you are a witness to or are a victim of an antisemitic incident,
[link removed]
click here to report it to ADL.
Let's continue to fight hate for good!
Doron F. Ezickson
Vice President, Mid-Atlantic/Midwest Division
Anti-Defamation League (ADL)
[link removed]
‌
The American Jewish community experienced the highest level of antisemitic incidents last year since tracking began in 1979, with more than 2,100 acts of assault, vandalism and harassment reported across the United States. The total number of antisemitic incidents in 2019 increased 12 percent over the previous year, with a disturbing 56 percent increase in assaults
[link removed]
Read More
‌
‌
The District of Columbia, Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia experienced a total of 87 incidents combined. The incidents break down as follows:
- Maryland: 20 total incidents reported in 2019 (3rd highest in the past 5 years)
- Vandalism: 11 incidents; up from 6 incidents in 2018
- Harassment: 8 incidents; down from 32 incidents in 2018
- Assault: 1 incident; no change from 2018
North Carolina: 20 total incidents reported in 2019 (2nd highest in the past 5 years)
- Vandalism: 10 incidents; up from 9 incidents in 2018
- Harassment: 10 incidents; down from 24 incidents in 2018
- Assault: 0 incidents, down from 1 incident in 2018
Virginia: 28 total incidents reported in 2019 (3rd highest in the past 5 years)
- Vandalism: 12 incidents; up from 11 incidents in 2018
- Harassment: 16 incidents; down from 20 incidents in 2018
- Assault: 0 incidents reported over the last 5 years
Washington, D.C.: 19 total incidents reported in 2019 (2nd highest in the past 5 years, tied with 2016)
- Vandalism: 6 incidents; up from 4 incidents in 2018
- Harassment: 13 incidents; down from 28 incidents in 2018
- Assault: 0 incidents reported over the last 5 years
[link removed]
CLICK HERE to read a press release covering ADL Washington, D.C. Audit of Antisemitic Incidents.
‌
[link removed]
‌
Extremist groups or individuals committed 270 antisemitic incidents in 2019, up from 249 in 2018. A few examples: The Daily Stormer Book Club and other groups distributed hate-filled fliers on dozens of college campuses. Witness for Peace targeted a synagogue in Michigan every week on Shabbat. The white supremacist group Shield Wall Network disrupted a Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony in Arkansas. A small militant neo-Nazi organization called The Base orchestrated a multi-state vandalism ring dubbed “Operation Kristallnacht” that defaced synagogues with antisemitic imagery.
In April, ADL identified a dangerous white supremacist and brought him to the attention of law enforcement after he posted violent antisemitic threats online.
[link removed]
Corbin Kauffman was charged with interstate transmission of threats, a federal crime that carries a maximum of five years in prison.
[link removed]
Read More
‌
[link removed]
‌
In K-12 schools and on college campuses across the country, students experienced antisemitic harassment, vandalism and even physical assault.
There were 411 antisemitic incidents reported in non-Jewish K-12 schools, an increase of 19% from 2018. Because many children don’t feel empowered to report their experiences, the actual number is probably significantly higher. In addition to the physical attacks, the harassment faced by Jewish students in elementary and high schools included Holocaust jokes and references, hostile posts on social media platforms like Snapchat and TikTok, and images of swastikas on walls and desks in their schools.
On college campuses, where 186 incidents were reported in 2019, 20 percent involved references to Israel or Zionism. Other acts of vandalism included the desecration of mezuzot in residential halls and hateful messages like “We must exterminate the Jews.”
[link removed]
Read More
‌
‌
Lauren* a middle-school student in Georgia, experienced four separate incidents of antisemitism at her school. It began when a boy on her school bus said to her and other students, multiple times, that “All Jews must die.” On a different occasion, a boy performed a Nazi salute and said he was related to Hitler.
She took action each time, reporting back to her father, her teacher and the school’s vice principal. But the school’s response was inadequate. They weren’t supporting her, and they weren’t doing anything to change the school culture.
The family contacted ADL, and we responded immediately. ADL staff participated in a meeting between school district officials, the principal, and the girl’s father, helping them to develop a plan to address the school culture. ADL then facilitated a two-day intensive peer training and brought a speaker to a grade-wide assembly. The school has committed to implementing ADL’s anti-bias program, No Place for Hate, this year.
Now, the girl who felt the sting of these antisemitic incidents feels like her school is becoming a more welcoming environment for her and other Jewish students. Lauren has spoken at local ADL events, sharing a message that is very important to her: “You have to speak up. The next time anything, anything at all happens,” she exhorts the audience, “be responsible and report it.”
If you witness or experience an act of antisemitism or hate, please report it to
[link removed]
ADL online or by connecting with
[link removed]
your local ADL office .
(*Note: Lauren’s real name has been replaced for privacy reasons.)
‌
[link removed]
‌
You can fight hate with ADL. At a time when we can all feel isolated, we can still join together to fight hate for good and make a difference in our communities.
Join ADL for a special webinar about the 2019 Audit of Antisemitic Incidents as the next event in our
[link removed]
Fighting Hate from Home series on Thursday, May 14 at 2:30pm ET.
SPEAK UP: Host a
[link removed]
Table Talk discussion with your family, friend and community and start meaningful conversations around antisemitism and how you can speak out against antisemitism and hate.
SHARE FACTS: Learn about antisemitism and hate, then share your knowledge with others. Check out ADL’s
[link removed]
educational resources to help young people understand and challenge antisemitism.
SHOW STRENGTH:
[link removed]
Report incidents of antisemitism to ADL, your local Jewish community, and/or law enforcement.
[link removed]
MORE WAYS TO TAKE ACTION
‌
[link removed]
Support Our Work
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
Read our blog
[link removed]
send to a friend /
[link removed]
Contact ADL
ADL / 605 Third Avenue / New York, NY 10158
(c)2020 Anti-Defamation League. All rights reserved.
[link removed]
Unsubscribe or Update Email Preferences /
[link removed]
Privacy Policy
[link removed]