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‘We will march against antisemitism – again’

In the past year, Jews were the most targeted faith minority in the UK

November 15, 2024 13:16
march against antisemitism
(l-r) CAA CEO Gideon Falter, Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis, Tracy-Ann Oberman, Eddie Marsan, and Rachel Riley during the National March Against Antisemitism last November (Photo:Omaggio)
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Just over a year after a march against Jew-hate, which saw over 100,000 people take to the streets of London, the Campaign Against Antisemitism has announced that it is organising a similar march on December 8.

A spokesperson for the CAA said the decision to make another public stand was due to the increase in antisemitic hate crime, which has quadrupled in the past year, and that “Jews are now the most targeted faith minority in the country, despite our minuscule numbers”.

According to government data released in October, there were 121 religious hate crimes per 10,000 population against Jewish people over the past year, the highest rate for any religious group.

The spokesperson added: “Week after week, our capital city and other urban areas have become no-go zones, not just for Jews but for the majority of British people, who say that Palestine protests put them off going into town. These protests have unleashed a tidal wave of antisemitism that has left no part of our society unaffected. Jewish people feel like [they’re] drowning.”