Become a Member
Opinion

The surge in antisemitism against British Jews cannot be blamed on anti-Israel hatred

The CST's David Delew explains how this spike in Jew-hate is different to past increases triggered by events in the Middle East

February 6, 2019 16:45
Antisemitic graffiti in London
2 min read

I doubt there will be much surprise about the record figures in CST’s Antisemitic Incidents Report for 2018, but the statistics are only an indicator of the true total.

Studies show that most incidents never get reported to CST or police; and the figures for Internet and social media antisemitism are a mere fraction of what is out there. Nevertheless, CST’s methodology is systematic and sober, meaning the overall fact of increased antisemitic abuse is wholly accurate and an indispensable guide for what is happening.  

From CST’s perspective, however, the most important thing is what the statistics do not obviously show. Since the early 2000s, there has been growing awareness that overseas conflicts cause sharp, sudden increases in domestic antisemitism. Of course, this was most obvious when Israel was in the news. I vividly recall Israel’s 2009 and 2014 conflicts, with Hizbollah and Hamas respectively, as being times when antisemitic incidents were far more intense and violent than is currently the case, with communal fear made worse by extensive anti-Israel protests on the streets.

Now, 2016, 2017 and 2018 are all the worst years on record, but there is a very different dynamic. Israel has not been fully at war and this latest antisemitism is about the condition of Britain today. It cannot somehow be blamed upon anti-Israel hatred, acted out against British Jews. Nor can it somehow be blamed upon British Muslims, as some people might rush to do.