With news of antisemitic incidents on the rise in Germany, readers abroad may understandably be concerned. In Berlin alone, where I live, the number of incidents rose by 14 per cent over the previous year, to 1,083.
Many cases are never solved — and it’s likely that many are not reported, either — but where perpetrators are identified, the vast majority comes from far-right circles, with some in extreme left or Islamic categories.
Just this week, a 20-year-old man wearing a kippah was spat on and insulted in Berlin. And a rabbi who served in Düsseldorf for 18 years reported having been harassed by an aggressive man — the first such incident in all that time.
But these statistics do not permeate my everyday world. I personally feel safe on the streets and in the synagogues; in the latter, security systems perhaps serve more to reassure participants than to protect against an unseen threat.