Dig into G100 map to see which countries had the best and worst scores
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John, antisemitism is nothing short of a global emergency in this post-October 7 world. We are seeing these alarming trends play out from the Middle East to Asia, from Europe to North and South America.

Today ADL is releasing a new Global 100 report and interactive tool showing that nearly half of all adults worldwide hold elevated levels of antisemitic attitudes. The survey, conducted by ADL and coordinated with Ipsos and other research partners, included over 58,000 adults from 103 countries and territories.

Map of the world

The survey found that 46 percent of the world’s adult population, that is over 2.2 billion individuals, harbor deeply entrenched antisemitic attitudes, more than double the number of people with similar attitudes in ADL’s first worldwide survey a decade ago. Click on the map to see which countries had the highest antisemitism index scores, and which showed the lowest rates.

To put this simply, the data is clearly a warning to us all, and a wake-up call for collective action. The Global 100 data highlights areas where governments can take action to begin to reverse these trends as part of a whole-of-society approach — including government, ADL and other civil society groups and individuals.

Thank you for speaking out with ADL to Fight Hate for Good.

Read the Global 100 Report

Sincerely,
JG signature
Jonathan Greenblatt
CEO and National Director
ADL

P.S. If you want to take action about global antisemitism, you won’t want to miss Never Is Now, the world’s largest summit on antisemitism and hate on March 3-4 in New York at the Javits Center. Leading voices in the fight against antisemitism from around the globe will be speaking at the conference. Click here to register now.