Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC)
Examining Crisis-Level Antisemitism in 2023
In 2022, the ADL tracked 3,698 antisemitic incidents, and that was a then-new all-time high. By comparison, 2023’s 8,873 incidents made 2022 look like a cakewalk. For a long-term comparison, consider that we hadn’t even broken 1,000 incidents per year until 2016; we only first broke the 2,000 mark in 2019; and we only passed 3,000 in 2022. Consider this: The quantity of incidents just in 2023 is about equal to all those in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 combined. For those who don’t think we’re in a crisis, the data clearly suggests otherwise.
Last week, we officially learned the international numbers were not much better. From a global study put out by the ADL and Tel Aviv University, we witnessed that countries showed increases from 2022 to 2023 as follows:
With all this in mind, let’s not mince words: The situation is dire. However, I’d like to offer you the final reflection from Professor Uriya Shavit’s foreword to the report:
This is much the same type of message that Dara Horn and other Jewish leaders have broadcast for some time, and it was also essentially the theme of the benediction I gave at last week’s Yom HaShoah commemoration. While we rally alongside those like the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism (in their newly reinvigorated “blue square campaign” #🟦) to respond to external threats, we need to double down on recognizing the internal beauty of who we are as a people. If we forget that or lose pride in ourselves, the fight against antisemitism might ultimately be irrelevant.