Julie Nathan analyses contemporary sources of antisemitic incidents

Julie Nathan analyses contemporary sources of antisemitic incidents

The following article was ori­gin­ally published on 12th June, 2018 in The Times of Israel (Blogs). The original article can be accessed here.


Contemporary Sources of Antisemitic Incidents

Julie Nathan
Times of Israel (Blogs)
June 12, 2018

 
There is much debate over who poses the greatest threat to Jews in the 21st century. Some point to the far Right, others to the Islamists, and some to the far Left. Often, it is ideo­lo­gic­al or political con­sid­er­a­tions that determine where the pointing is directed towards, rather than looking object­ively at the stat­ist­ics.
While the main sources of antisemitic incidents and discourse remains the same, the pro­por­tion of antisemitism emanating from each category is con­ten­tious territory.
Most reports or data on antisemitic incidents do not contain the source of, or motiv­a­tion for, the antisemitism — whether political or religious, and many do not state the ethnicity, gender or age, of the per­pet­rat­or. This is partly due to the per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic incidents, eg vandalism, arson, etc, often being uniden­ti­fied and unknown.
However, the motiv­a­tion for some incidents can be iden­ti­fied, eg when graffiti or a leaflet has the name of a group attached, or when arrests are made, or in cases of physical assault and verbal abuse, aspects of the identity and motiv­a­tion of the per­pet­rat­or are often iden­ti­fi­able due to the close proximity of per­pet­rat­or and victim. Overall, in com­par­is­on to the amount of inform­a­tion on antisemitic incidents (victim, incident type, date, place etc) there is much less inform­a­tion on the per­pet­rat­ors of these acts.
The following inform­a­tion on the sources of antisemitic incidents, therefore, is not meant to be con­clus­ive or even a com­pre­hens­ive study, but rather an overview to indicate what the available studies show. The following, therefore, will only tell a partial story, and must be seen in that light, and read with that caution.
The four countries with the highest numbers of Jews, outside of Israel, are the USA, France, Canada, and Britain. Data and studies from these countries, plus Australia, that provide inform­a­tion on per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic incidents is set out below.
Europe – seven countries
A study on “Antisemitic Violence in Europe” conducted by Oslo Uni­ver­sity in 2005 – 2015, and published in 2017, looked at seven European countries – Denmark, France, Germany, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and the UK. Four of these countries have large Jewish minor­it­ies, and all have a data col­lec­tion system for antisemitic incidents.
The study noted that “France and the UK have the largest total number of violent incidents when we adjust for different reporting levels, estimated at 4,092 and 3,844 incidents during the period 2005 – 2015.”
In brief, the study found that those “exposed to [antisemitic] violence and serious threats” in France, the UK, Germany and Sweden “most often perceived the perpetrator(s) to be “someone with a Muslim extremist view”” and that “right-wing extrem­ists, who are often asso­ci­ated with antisemitism, in fact con­sti­tute a clear minority of per­pet­rat­ors.” In addition, “in France, Sweden and the UK (but not in Germany) the per­pet­rat­or was perceived to be left-wing more often than right-wing.” However, “per­pet­rat­ors in Russia are described exclus­ively as right-wing extrem­ists (neo-Nazis and skinheads).”
In the two countries with the largest Jewish pop­u­la­tions (France and Britain), the victims of antisemitic incidents perceived Muslims to be the number one per­pet­rat­ors, then the left-wing, then the right-wing. In Russia, however, most per­pet­rat­ors were perceived to be from the far right.
Dr. Manfred Ger­sten­feld, a scholar of antisemitism, wrote in 2018 that “Muslim anti-Semitism in Europe has been greatly under-researched. Many author­it­ies have tried to keep stat­ist­ic­al data and other inform­a­tion about anti-Semitic attitudes among Muslim immig­rants and their des­cend­ants out of the limelight. This has occurred despite the fact that all resolved murders of Jews in Western Europe in the past decade have been committed by Muslims. The same is largely true for other extreme anti-Semitic incidents. Among these are serious attacks on syn­agogues in France.”
Ger­sten­feld continued, noting that in 2003, The Center for Research on Anti-Semitism (CRA) at the Technical Uni­ver­sity of Berlin, which was charged with con­duct­ing a study on European antisemitism, by the European Mon­it­or­ing Centre on Racism and Xeno­pho­bia (EUMC), “iden­ti­fied young Muslims of Arab descent as the main per­pet­rat­ors of physical attacks against Jews and the desec­ra­tion and destruc­tion of syn­agogues. The EUMC did not publish the study. The CRA stated that the reason for not pub­lish­ing the document was that it exposed the many Muslim per­pet­rat­ors of anti-Semitic incidents.” In the end, the World Jewish Congress obtained and published the CRA report.
France
In France, there have been thirteen murders of Jews motivated by antisemitism since 2003 – all committed by Muslims. These include: Sébastien Selam (2003), Ilan Halimi (2006), Rabbi Yonatan Sandler, Aryeh Sandler, aged 6, Gabriel Sandler, aged 3, Miriam Monsonego, aged 8 (at a Jewish school in Toulouse in 2012), Elsa Cayat (at Charlie Hebdo in 2015), Yohan Cohen, Yoav Hattab, François-Michel Saada and Philippe Braham (at the Hyper Cacher in 2015), Sarah Halimi (2017), and Mireille Knoll (2018).
It should be noted that a Muslim, Lassana Bathily, working at the Hyper Cacher saved the lives of many other Jews by hiding them from the gunman. Elsa Cayat is included in this list as the Islamist murderers chose to spare all the women except one, the only Jewish woman who was iden­ti­fied as Jewish by the per­pet­rat­ors and had received racist death threats from Islamists in the past. Georges Wolinski, although Jewish, is excluded from the list, as he was killed primarily because he worked at Charlie Hebdo, along with the other male workers.
The former Prime Minister of France, Manuel Valls, stated in 2016 that “The problem, is that anti-Semitism today in France comes less from the far right than from indi­vidu­als of the Muslim faith or culture”. He added that in France, for at least two decades, all attacks against Jews in which the per­pet­rat­or has been iden­ti­fied have come from Muslims.
An extensive article in the New York Times in 2018 states: “Anti-Semitism was supposed to be a disease of the far right. But the people actually killing Jews in France these days are not members of the National Front. They are Islamists. “The major crimes against the Jewish community — Ilan Halimi, the Toulouse killings, the Hyper Cacher killings, Sarah Halimi — all of them have all been carried out by rad­ic­al­ized Muslims,” Robert Ejnes, the executive director of CRIF, an umbrella organ­iz­a­tion of French Jewish groups. […] Jews represent less than 1 percent of the pop­u­la­tion in France, yet in 2014, 51 percent of all racist attacks were carried out against them, according to the French Interior Ministry.”
In France, the murder of Jews was per­pet­rated exclus­ively by Muslims. As to other forms of antisemitic incidents, high level claims are made that Muslims feature prom­in­ently, but actual studies on the com­pos­i­tion of per­pet­rat­ors has not been con­clus­ively determ­ined.
Britain
In Britain, both the police and the Community Security Trust (CST), a Jewish community organ­isa­tion, monitor, document and analyse antisemitic incidents.
In identi­fy­ing the political, religious or ethnic identity of a per­pet­rat­or, Dave Rich of CST noted in 2014 that the use of the Nazi term “Heil Hitler” is not confined to neo-Nazis or the far right, but he writes that para­dox­ic­ally “Those British Muslims who verbally abuse British Jews on the street are more likely to shout ‘Heil Hitler’ than ‘Allahu Akhbar’ when they do so.” Clearly, the term is recog­nised widely as being extremely offensive to Jews. Rich adds that “The most acute threat to Jewish life in Europe today comes from the jihadists of al-Qaeda, ISIS and their sup­port­ers. Much antisemitic hate crime in Western Europe is per­pet­rated by Muslim youths (although this varies from country to country, and from city to city).”
In its “Antisemitic Incidents Report 2017”, the CST stated (page 29): “a descrip­tion of the ethnic appear­ance of the offenders was obtained in 420, or 30 per cent, of the 1,382 antisemitic incidents recorded by CST in 2017. Of these, 225 offenders were described as ‘White – North European’ (54 per cent); 13 offenders were described as ‘White – South European’ (three per cent); 77 offenders were described as ‘Black’ (18 per cent); 74 offenders were described as ‘South Asian’ (18 per cent); one offender was described as ‘Far East or South East Asian’ (0.2 per cent); and 30 offenders were described as being ‘Arab or North African’ (seven per cent).” Of note, “CST uses the ‘IC1‑6’ system, used by the UK Police services, for cat­egor­ising the ethnic appear­ance of offenders.” The report cautions that “While it is possible to collect data regarding the ethnic appear­ance of incident offenders, this data is not direct evidence of the offenders’ religious affil­i­ations.”
According to these stat­ist­ics, albeit referring only to 30% of incidents, the ethnic appear­ance breakdown of per­pet­rat­ors is 57% of European back­ground, 18% Black, and 25% composed of those of South Asian (pre­dom­in­antly Pakistani, Banglade­shi, and Indian), Arab or North African back­ground.
In previous years, ‘TellMama’ (Measuring Anti-Muslim Attacks), which documents anti-Muslim incidents, expressed concern at the high pro­por­tion of Muslims involved in antisemitic incidents, when in September 2014 noted that “The CST have just released their July figures on antisemitic hate crimes and the figures make for grim reading, par­tic­u­larly when victim feedback on the profiles of their per­pet­rat­ors indicate that a high pro­por­tion of the 107 cases where the profiles of the per­pet­rat­or are known, are of a Muslim back­ground. (Victims reported per­pet­rat­or profiles in 107 out of the 302 cases in July 2014).”
The ‘Report of the All-Party Par­lia­ment­ary Inquiry into Antisemitism’ in February 2015, noted (page 77) that: “indic­a­tions from victim feedback on the profiles of per­pet­rat­ors, that a high pro­por­tion of cases involved someone from a Muslim back­ground.”
A report by the ‘Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy’ by Günther Jikeli in May 2015 stated: “Stat­ist­ics for France and Great Britain from the last decade show that antisemitic per­pet­rat­ors have been dis­pro­por­tion­ately of Muslim origin. Exact numbers are difficult to establish, however, because most per­pet­rat­ors have not been iden­ti­fied. Cautious estim­a­tions put the per­cent­age of Muslim per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic acts in Great Britain at between 20 and 30 percent, while the per­cent­age of Muslims in the general pop­u­la­tion stands at 5 percent. About 30 percent of the per­pet­rat­ors in all antisemitic incidents in France in recent years have been iden­ti­fied as Muslim/Arab. […] Muslims make up 6 to 8 percent of the total pop­u­la­tion of France.”
In Britain, those of European back­ground are the clear majority of eth­nic­ally iden­ti­fied per­pet­rat­ors, at 57%. The next group, at 25%, is composed of people of South Asian (Pakistani, Banglade­shi, or Indian), Arab or North African back­ground; this group would pre­dom­in­antly be composed of Muslims, since those lands, apart from India (which has the largest Muslim minority in the world), are Muslim-majority countries.
Stat­ist­ic­ally, those of European back­ground are respons­ible for over twice as many incidents as those of a Muslim back­ground. However, Muslims are dis­pro­por­tion­ally rep­res­en­ted as per­pet­rat­ors – five times their pro­por­tion of the British pop­u­la­tion – given that Muslims account for 4 – 5% of the British pop­u­la­tion.
Canada
According to Stat­ist­ics Canada, a gov­ern­ment body, in reference to their ‘Police-reported hate crimes by motiv­a­tion and region, 2016’ (Table 2), the most targeted group for hate crimes in Canada were Jews, followed by Blacks, then Muslims, then LGBTI people. Of note, Jews make up only about 1% of the pop­u­la­tion of Canada.
On the per­pet­rat­ors, Stat­ist­ics Canada found that “Persons accused of crimes targeting Jewish pop­u­la­tions tended to be young compared to those accused of other types of hate crimes, with 40% being under the age of 17. Moreover, accused persons were almost always male (89%).”
According to Avi Benlolo, president and CEO of the Friends of Simon Wiesenth­al Center for Holocaust Studies, the sources of antisemitism in Canada are from “the old white suprem­acist form of anti-Semitism” and antisemitism “coming from the Muslim and the very left-wing academic, intel­lec­tu­al movement that is promoting things like boycotts and really the del­e­git­im­iz­a­tion of Israel, and that in turn is sending a ripple effect that creates more anti-Semitism for the general Jewish pop­u­la­tion.”
USA
In the United States, the FBI collects and analyses hate crime stat­ist­ics across the nation. For the seventeen years from 2000 to 2016 (the last year available), anti-Jewish hate crimes con­sti­tuted between 55% and 74% of all hate crimes in the U.S. in the “Religion” category. In this category, Jews con­sist­ently are the foremost victims of hate crime. However, overall, Jews are the second most targeted group for all cat­egor­ies of hate crimes, after Blacks. Of note, Jews comprise only 2% of the American pop­u­la­tion.
The FBI cat­egor­ises Offenders, with a slight change in ter­min­o­logy from 2013, according to race (“White, Black or African American, American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, and Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander”, mixed, and unknown) and ethnicity (““Hispanic or Latino” and “Not Hispanic or Latino””, mixed, and unknown). None of these cat­egor­ies provide much inform­a­tion to indicate motiv­a­tion. Of note, in a US Census report for 2010, on the “Defin­i­tion of Race Cat­egor­ies” it states: ““White” refers to a person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa.”
If the FBI uses the same defin­i­tion of ‘White’ as the US Census Bureau (both gov­ern­ment bodies) this means that ‘White’ can include a range of political and religious ideo­lo­gies, and eth­ni­cit­ies from neo-Nazis, white suprem­acists, the KKK, Christian Iden­tit­ari­ans, Islamists, sur­viv­al­ists, social­ists and so on; and ‘Black’ can also include a range of political and religious ideo­lo­gies, eg the antisemitic group Nation of Islam.
A report released in December 2016 by the Community Security Service (CSS) in the USA, ‘Terrorist Incidents and Attacks Against Jews and Israelis in the United States 1969 – 2016’ authored by Yehudit Barsky, cata­logued 104 serious incidents (including arson, shootings, and explosive devices) against Jews and Jewish insti­tu­tions from 1969 – 2016. The CSS executive summary states: “Of the incidents where motiv­a­tion can be ascer­tained, white suprem­acist and radical Islamist ideo­lo­gies were a central influ­en­cing factor.”
An extensive and com­pre­hens­ive article in ‘The Tower’ in 2017 by Johanna Markind invest­ig­ates the per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic hate crimes in the USA. Markind states that: “Cir­cum­stan­tial evidence suggests the main per­pet­rat­ors of anti-Semitic crimes come from two separate sources: right-wing groups such as white suprem­acists and neo-Nazis, and Muslims and/or Arabs. Unfor­tu­nately, little inform­a­tion has been sys­tem­at­ic­ally collected on the subject.” She notes that both the FBI and the Anti-Defam­a­tion League (ADL) provide little in the way of the identity of per­pet­rat­ors.
However, as written by Markind, the FBI recorded, in the case of anti-Jewish hate crimes, that of the 635 offenders in 2014, 87 were ‘White’, 20 were ‘Black’, 11 were ‘Non-Hispanic’, and 513 were unknown; in 2015, of the 695 offenders, 121 were ‘White’, 31 ‘Black’, 13 were ‘Non-Hispanic’, and 533 unknown. FBI data does not provide, or does not know, the race or ethnicity of over 75% of the per­pet­rat­ors of anti-Jewish hate crime.
Markind noted that the media often make assump­tions about the per­pet­rat­ors. For example when a Chanukah menorah was twisted into a Nazi swastika, on the front lawn of a Jewish home in Arizona in December 2016, the assump­tion was that it was done by white suprem­acists. As it turned out, an African-American and his three uniden­ti­fied accom­plices were respons­ible for the antisemitic act. This provides a good example that the nature of the act itself cannot provide con­clus­ive evidence of who the per­pet­rat­or is.
Australia
In Australia, the Executive Council of Aus­trali­an Jewry (ECAJ), the peak rep­res­ent­at­ive body of the Aus­trali­an Jewish community, publishes an annual report on antisemitism in Australia. Each report covers a twelve month period.
The ECAJ Report on Antisemitism in Australia in 2016, with a total of 210 incidents, included inform­a­tion on the ethnic com­pos­i­tion of the per­pet­rat­ors of some types of antisemitic incidents, namely physical assault and verbal abuse (both types of incidents are where the victim and per­pet­rat­or are within close physical proximity). Of the 91 incidents of assault and abuse in Sydney and Melbourne (the two main Jewish pop­u­la­tion centres in Australia), there were 43 incidents where the ethnicity of the perpetrator/s was iden­ti­fied in the reporting of the incident. Many incidents had multiple per­pet­rat­ors.
The data showed that of the 72 per­pet­rat­ors whose ethnicity was logged, these were composed of 34 Caucasian, 31 Middle Eastern, 5 Maori/Polynesian, and 2 African. Per­cent­age-wise, it comprised Caucasian at 47%, Middle Eastern at 43%, and ‘Other’ at 10%.
However, the breakdown between Sydney and Melbourne told a different story. In Sydney, it comprised Caucasian (17 per­pet­rat­ors) at 39%, and Middle Eastern (22 per­pet­rat­ors) at 51%. In Melbourne, it comprised Caucasian (17 per­pet­rat­ors) at 58%, and Middle Eastern (9 per­pet­rat­ors) at 31%. In both Sydney and Melbourne, ‘Other’ comprised 10%.
It is to be noted that this data only applies to 43 out of the 91 incidents of assault and abuse in Sydney and Melbourne, ie to 47% of these incidents, and therefore only tells a partial story. However, it does provide some indic­a­tion of the com­pos­i­tion of the ethnic sources of antisemitic incidents.
In the sub­sequent ECAJ Report on Antisemitism in Australia in 2017, 22% of the 230 recorded incidents were per­pet­rated by one group, a neo-Nazi group. These incidents comprised putting up posters, stickers, graffiti and murals. Some of these posters were calling to legalise the execution of Jews, demon­ising Jews as poisoning Aus­trali­an society, and blaming Jews for non-white immig­ra­tion.
In summary, in Australia over 2016 and 2017 (the years where stat­ist­ics on some per­pet­rat­ors were compiled and analysed), eth­nic­ally, in 2016, Caucasi­ans and Middle Eastern people are pre­dom­in­antly respons­ible in near equal pro­por­tions, at 47% and 43% respect­ively, for assault and abuse; while polit­ic­ally, in 2017, the extreme far right (ie neo-Nazis /white suprem­acists, under­stood to be composed of Caucasi­ans) are dis­pro­por­tion­ally respons­ible for posters and stickers, at 22%.
According to the Aus­trali­an Bureau of Stat­ist­ics (ABS) Census in 2006, approx­im­ately 370,000 people recorded Middle Eastern ancestry (which includes all eth­ni­cit­ies and national groups in the Middle East, such as Arab, Assyrian, Jewish, Kurdish). The ABS Census in 2016, recorded that over 320,000 (1.4% of) Aus­trali­ans spoke Arabic at home, and 604,000 (2.6% of) Aus­trali­ans recorded their religion as Islam.
Con­clu­sion
In the West, from the data and reports available (as above), the majority of per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic incidents come from two sources – Caucasi­ans and Muslims. This shows racial and religious com­pon­ents, but not the political bent of per­pet­rat­ors, whether far right, far left, or other. The reports also show that the motiv­a­tion and demo­graph­ic of per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic incidents vary from country to country and from year to year.
Inform­a­tion gleaned from the reports above, where per­pet­rat­ors have been iden­ti­fied by various means, indicate the following:

  • In France, all antisemitic murders are per­pet­rated by Muslims and appar­ently all or most serious attacks on Jews have also been per­pet­rated by Muslims.
  • In Britain, the majority of per­pet­rat­ors are of European back­ground, with those from immigrant Muslim back­grounds at around half the rate.
  • In Europe generally, another study found that in France, the UK, Germany and Sweden, the per­pet­rat­or is most often perceived to be an extremist Muslim; and in France, the UK, and Sweden, the per­pet­rat­or was perceived to be left-wing more often than right-wing.
  • In Russia, most per­pet­rat­ors are right-wing extrem­ists (assumed to be European).
  • In Canada, there is insuf­fi­cient data to make an assess­ment.
  • In the USA, per­pet­rat­ors are pre­dom­in­antly ‘White’ (which includes those of European, North African and Middle Eastern back­grounds), extreme right-wing and Islamists.
  • In Australia, for physical assault and verbal abuse in 2016, per­pet­rat­ors are roughly equal between Caucasian and Muslim, and in 2017, most per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic posters were by the extreme right-wing.

The fact that Caucasi­ans are one of the two main sources of per­pet­rat­ors is not sur­pris­ing, given that the West is populated primarily by Caucasi­ans. The fact that Muslims in the West are one of the two main sources of per­pet­rat­ors is of great concern, given that Muslims comprise only 2 – 8% of the pop­u­la­tion of the countries noted above, but comprise between 20 – 30% of per­pet­rat­ors.
The dis­pro­por­tion­al rep­res­ent­a­tion of Muslims as per­pet­rat­ors sends a worrying signal. It should also be noted that Caucasian and Muslim are not mutually exclusive terms, although the term Muslim in these studies usually refers to people of Arab (North African and Middle Eastern) and South Asian (Pakistani, Banglade­shi, and Indian) back­grounds.
However, despite widely held assump­tions, the rela­tion­ship between the nature of incidents and per­pet­rat­ors is not always clear cut. For example, yelling out “Heil Hitler” and the use of swastikas can come from Muslims or non-whites, as much as from neo-Nazis. Being iden­ti­fied as “White” (with the corollary assump­tion, in regard to per­pet­rat­ors of antisemitic incidents, of being white suprem­acists or neo-Nazis) in the US includes not just those of European back­ground, but also those of North African and Middle Eastern back­grounds, ie Muslims.
In summary, in the twenty-first century so far, when it comes to murdering Jews, the ultimate act of Jew-hatred, Islamists have been and continue to be the greatest threat to Jews. However, given the expo­nen­tial rise in extreme right-wing activity with neo-Nazis openly calling for the murder of Jews, it remains to be seen where that takes us.
This study only dealt with incidents, not discourse. However, the discourse about Jews, Judaism and Israel, as well as the societal atmo­sphere and cultural history often have a profound influence on the levels, intensity and motiv­a­tion to commit antisemitic incidents. It is recog­nised that the discourse, online and offline, has a con­sid­er­able influence on the incidents.
Violence does not occur in a vacuum. It is words, when given free reign, which create a poisonous atmo­sphere for those targeted by racism. It is words that incite hatred and violence. As Irwin Cotler, former Canadian Minister for Justice, stated: “The Holocaust did not begin in the gas chambers – it began with words.”
Part of the fight against antisemitic incidents involves identi­fy­ing the sources of the incidents, ensuring full legal sanction against per­pet­rat­ors and their enablers, and public con­dem­na­tions and action against those who spread, encourage or incite demon­isa­tion of Jews and violence against Jews and Jewish insti­tu­tions. Antisemitism does not just affect Jews, it infects and cripples a whole society.

Julie Nathan is the Research Officer for the Executive Council of Aus­trali­an Jewry and authors the annual ECAJ Report on Antisemitism in Australia.
 

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