Wiesenthal Centre publishes top ten antisemitism list for 2022
The Simon Wiesenthal Centre released its annual Global antisemitism Top Ten list in Jerusalem…reports Benjamin Weinthal.
The Wiesenthal list included an exclusive JNS report from November about a former German Lutheran bishop, Gerhard Ulrich, who is embroiled in an antisemitism scandal and yet was appointed to combat antisemitism in the state of Schleswig-Holstein.
Ulrich has faced criticism from the Wiesenthal Centre for contributing to the legitimisation of antisemitism in Germany.
Rapper Ye (Kayne West) was ranked No. 1 on the list because he “used his unparalleled social media influence to morph these historic [anti-Jewish] tropes into a firestorm of real-time anti-Semitism—absorbed by millions, and inspiring acts of hate against Jews—living and dead.”
“The unprecedented mainstreaming of Jew-hatred on social media, led by Kanye West (Ye), fueled anti-Semitic hate crimes and normalised anti-Jewish hate speech,” said Rabbi Marvin Hier, Simon Wiesenthal Centre (SWC) founder and CEO.
West fell under the list’s “The Influencers” category.
NBA player Kyrie Irving, who has 22.5 million social media followers, was also included in “The Influencers’ section, because he “shared a promotion of an anti-Semitic movie.”
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, SWC associate dean and director of global social action, said, “Politicians offer words of solace to Jewish victims but failed to take effective measures to curb the attacks, while U.N. diplomats, cultural and academic elite often legitimise hatred of the Jewish state.”
SWC noted “there were more incidents of anti-Semitism at Harvard University…than at any other U.S. university in 2022,” adding, “Attempts were also made to disrupt pro-Israel speakers. A swastika was found in an undergraduate dorm, the school paper endorsed the anti-Semitic, anti-Israel Boycott Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, and Harvard’s Palestine Solidarity Committee erected a wall with Holocaust imagery replete with anti-Semitic statements.”
SWC outlined violent outbreaks of Jew-hatred in New York and Chicago.
“In November, two men, Christopher Brown and Matthew Mahrer, were arrested by the FBI/NYPD Joint Terrorism Task Force and the NYPD Counterterrorism and Intelligence Bureau for threatening an armed attack on a synagogue. The two were taken into custody before they could act on their plan to murder members of the local Jewish community. They were found carrying several weapons including a Glock semi-automatic handgun, and a ghost gun with an extended 30-round magazine and laser sight,” wrote the Wiesenthal Centre.
Regarding No. 6 on the list, the Wiesenthal experts wrote, “Parents and students at a Jewish girls’ school for parent-teacher conferences witnessed a Chicago man threaten to ‘burn a rabbi in a gas oven’ just days before the Chanukah festival. The man was arrested and held on bail. Other incidents involving obviously religious people occurred in Jewish neighbourhoods during 2022.”
Wiesenthal noted that hate incidents increased by 71% in Chicago and the main targets were American Jews and African-Americans.
Iran’s regime garnered the No. 4 spot. In “keeping with the best traditions of the Nazis and Soviet Communists, the Iranian Regime’s serial genocidal and theological hatred of Jews is led by a so-called Centre for Jewish Studies. Iran’s Centre for Jewish Studies has published more than 1,000 blatantly anti-Semitic essays weaving a toxic mix of theology, historic hatred of Jews, and anti-Israel screeds on behalf of the nefarious Khamenei regime,” the SWC noted.
No. 5 on the list went to Malik Akram, a British-Pakistani man who “On Shabbat morning January 15th, 2022… travelled thousands of miles to target a small synagogue in Colleyville, Texas, a suburb in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Akram…took four hostages at Congregation Beth Israel. Akram was demanding the release of an al Qaeda operative convicted of attempted murder of Americans. Hours later, Akram was killed by an FBI rescue team and none of the hostages were injured.”
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas secured spot No. 3 on the list because he accused Israel of having committed “50 Holocausts,” speaking while standing alongside German Chancellor Scholz during a press conference in Berlin. Wiesenthal also took Scholz to task because he “only condemned the remarks the next day.”
A substantial part of the Top Ten list was devoted to the explosion of antisemitism in Germany.
“Jewish leaders are deeply worried over the continuing hate crimes and the fact that two of Germany’s anti-Semitism czars [Ulrich and Baden-Württemberg state’s Michael Blume] are themselves accused of anti-Semitism. Also troubling is Germany’s continuing close economic ties with the Holocaust-denying, genocide-threatening Iranian regime,” Wiesenthal wrote.
“In November, a German Iranian man was arrested for multiple Molotov cocktail attacks on synagogues. The latest attack took place at a synagogue in Bochum. A witness, also a German-Iranian, told police that the suspect tried to recruit him for the attack and assured him he would be allowed to return to Iran without repercussions,” the centre continued.
Blume was cited in the new list as one of two German state commissioners tasked with fighting antisemitism who has been accused of antisemitism. In 2021, SWC listed Blume’s alleged antisemitic social media activities, pro-BDS activity and failure to combat Iranian regime antisemitism in the city of Freiburg as the seventh-worst outbreak of Jew-hatred.
Blume has gained the support of the non-Jewish German activist Michael Thaidigsmann, who published a pro-Iran nuclear deal interview on the website of the EU Watch NGO. Israel views the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the formal name of the 2015 nuclear accord, as an existential threat.
Blume is the first German antisemitism commissioner to appear twice in the Wiesenthal Centre’s annual lists.
In October, a court in Hamburg issued a decision permitting Blume to be labelled antisemitic due to some of his statements. JNS reported in August about the growing number of calls for Blume to resign. Henryk M. Broder, one of Germany’s leading experts on antisemitism, said, Blume practices a “selective antisemitism” targeting conservative and right-of-centre Jews.
The Wiesenthal Centre noted that Semen Gorelik, chairman of a Jewish community in the state of Brandenburg, announced last month “in a blistering public letter that he is leaving Germany for Israel and urged German Jews to follow suit due to the rising tide of anti-Semitism in the country.”