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Karen Pollock

ByKaren Pollock, Karen Pollock

Opinion

The Prince of Wales has reminded us that the Jewish community is not alone

Remembering the Holocaust and taking a stand against antisemitism is intrinsic to who the Royal Family are

March 5, 2024 15:06
The Prince of Wales Visits the Western Marble Arch Synagogue
The Prince of Wales during a visit to the Western Marble Arch Synagogue, where he joined a conversation with young Ambassadors of the Holocaust Educational Trust (Picture by Andrew Palace / Kensington Palace)
3 min read

The last six months have been unlike anything that the Jewish community has ever experienced. We witnessed from afar the indescribable terrorist attack by Hamas against the State of Israel. Through social media, rolling news and messages from loved ones, we saw the worst crimes imaginable carried out against Jews, because they were Jews. Mass murder, carried out by genocidal terrorists, in 2023.

Not even a few hours after Hamas had started its murderous rampage, British Jews became the targets of an explosion of antisemitism. Statistics from CST showed that last year was the worst on record for antisemitism with over 4,100 incidents – an increase of 150% on 2022. The rapid speed of the increase in antisemitism following the October 7 attack makes clear that this was happening in celebration of Hamas’ brutal attack. According to the recent report by the CST, antisemitic incidents in the week directly after October 7 – before Israel launched its military response in Gaza – were the highest ever recorded. That means that in 416 separate incidents, people celebrated the Hamas attack on Israel by committing antisemitic acts that week, entirely unrelated to the situation in Gaza which at that point, remained unchanged.

Antisemitism has flooded our streets, schools, universities and online spaces. British Jews have been targeted while walking to synagogue, dropping their kids off at school or while popping down to the local shops – just for being Jewish.

The community has been loud with the message that antisemitism is not a Jewish problem but, rather, a problem for all of society, that demands a response from society as a whole.