'A canary in the coal mine': Most European Jews say anti-Semitism is getting worse

Nearly 90 per cent of respondents in a recent EU survey felt anti-Semitism has increased in their country.

Demonstrators hold signs against anti-Semitism during a silent march in Paris on March 28, 2018.

Demonstrators hold signs against anti-Semitism during a silent march in Paris on March 28, 2018. Source: SIPA USA

The EU has voiced alarm after a survey showed nine of 10 European Jews believe anti-Semitism has worsened in the last five years, calling it a "canary in the coal mine".

The European Union's Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) said 85 per cent of Jews surveyed believe anti-Semitism is the main problem in their country and 38 per cent have considered emigrating.

The survey found during a 12 month period more than a quarter of respondents experienced anti-Semitic harassment at least once and those who carry, wear or display items in public that could identify them as Jewish face an increased rate of harassment (37 per cent) than those who don't.

"Whenever communities are set up one against the other, whenever identity politics comes into the game again, then the first victims are always the Jews," European Commission Vice-President Frans Timmermans said.

"You need to know that anti-Semitism is like the canary in the coal mine," he told a news conference.
European Commission Vice-President Frans Timmermans said more needs to be done to combat a rising tide of anti-semetic rhetoric.
European Commission Vice-President Frans Timmermans said more needs to be done to combat a rising tide of anti-semetic rhetoric. Source: AP
 paved the way to the Holocaust, in which more six million Jews were murdered, along with Roma, homosexuals, Catholics, the disabled and political enemies.
Timmermans, a former Dutch foreign minister, said Europe had had many diseases in the 20th century but the only one that has "remained incurable is anti-Semitism".

He said it was the duty of every European politician of every party to fight anti-Semitism, whether at the European, national or local level.  

He called for better training for law enforcement officials and teachers, and urged member states to boost security to prevent the cost being "disproportionately on the shoulders" of the Jewish community

Timmermans also urged Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban to stop "using dog whistle words" and campaigns that stir up anti-Semitism in his country.
The European Union's Agency for Fundamental Rights
The European Union's Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) said 85 per cent of Jews surveyed believe anti-Semitism is the main problem in their country. Source: AAP
He cited billboards used by the Orban government in its 2017 poster campaign against US-Hungarian billionaire George Soros that were daubed with anti-Semitic graffiti.

The Soros-founded Central European University said last week it had been "forced" to move its most prestigious study programmes to Vienna after a long and bitter legal battle with Orban's government.

The FRA study said 89 per cent of respondents felt anti-Semitism had grown in their country in the last five years, with 90 per cent adding it is especially bad online.

Another 70 per cent said they found anti-Semitism in the media and political discourse. Nearly 30 per cent said they had been harassed.
Yet, 80 per cent do not report serious incidents to the police or other authorities, many complaining it would be pointless.

The survey found that people are facing "so much anti-Semitic abuse that some of the incidents they experience appear trivial to them."

The "normalisation" of anti-Semitism was evident because the range of perpetrators ranged from the entire "social and political spectrum".

The May-June survey questioned 16,395 Jews in 12 EU member States: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Earlier this year, nearly one in five European people surveyed said anti-Semitism is a response to the everyday actions of Jews.

More than a quarter of respondents also said most anti-Semitism in their country was a response to the actions of the state of Israel.

With AFP


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4 min read
Published 11 December 2018 1:03pm
Updated 12 December 2018 7:58am
By Riley Morgan
Source: AFP, SBS

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