NEW YORK — The Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) study of anti-Semitism in the U.S. shows a 14 percent decrease in incidents during 2012, the second consecutive year of a downward trend.
Overall the ADL counted 927 anti-Semitic incidents — including assaults, vandalism and harassment — down from the 1,080 incidents reported in 2011. Abraham H. Foxman, the ADL’s national director, called the trend “encouraging.”
“While these numbers only provide one snapshot of anti-Semitism in America, to the extent that they serve as a barometer the decline shows that we have made progress as a society in confronting anti-Jewish hatred,” he said.
The ADL has conducted its annual survey since 1979. The recent decline in anti-Semitic incidents contrasts with findings in many European countries, where anti-Semitic incidents continue to rise. In France, for example, the Jewish Community Security Service recorded 614 anti-Semitic acts in 2012, compared to 389 in 2011 — a 58 percent jump.
Online expressions of anti-Semitism “are simply too numerous to track,” according to the report, and are only counted “if they specifically target an individual.”
“While we cannot point to any single explanation for the fluctuations from year to year, the declines of the past several years occur within the context of the continued proliferation of hatred online,” said Barry Curtiss-Lusher, ADL national chair.
“This explosion of viral hate is impossible to quantify, but it may have led to a migration of sorts where the haters and bigots are more likely to take to the Internet to express themselves anonymously rather than acting out in a public setting,” he said, adding that the potential audience for online hatred numbers in the millions, and the danger is that it can fuel real-world violence.
The report also describes increasing hostility against Jews on college campuses, with a total of 61 incidents reported in 2012, up from 22 incidents reported in 2011.
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