Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Ava Sasani

Jewish and Muslim Americans fear rise in hate crimes amid Israel-Hamas war

A female police officer in dark aviator sunglasses, black vaulted cap and uniform, hand on her weapon at her side, stands in front of a crowd gate and dozens of people holding green, red and white Palestinian flags.
Police stand guard as supporters of Palestine participate in a rally to condemn the recent fighting in Gaza on 13 October 2023 in New York City. Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Jewish and Muslim Americans in cities all around the country are worried that escalating tensions between Israel and Palestine, which some are calling “isolating and scary”, will exacerbate hate crimes and harassment in the United States.

For many Arab Americans in New York City, Bay Ridge was always a place of safety. The south Brooklyn neighborhood is 3 sq miles of Arabic bodega signs, halal grocers and a growing community of Palestinian, Yemeni, Syrian and Egyptian families.

On Wednesday, that sense of safety was punctured by reports of a hate crime.

Police said “three alleged assailants in three cars were waving Israeli flags” and yelled “anti-Palestinian remarks at three men walking on 86th Street”, according to a statement this week by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). “The group got out of their car and assaulted the three men.”

​​Elsewhere in Brooklyn, local television station ABC7 reported that two men walked up to two people holding Palestinian flags, grabbed a flag and hit one person over the head. In Gravesend – also in Brooklyn – two juvenile boys pointed what turned out to be fake guns at the local B’nai Yosef synagogue, police said. The boys were given criminal court summonses.

Earlier this year, FBI data revealed that the number of US hate crimes increased again in 2021, continuing an alarming rise.

“But this moment is different,” said Corey Saylor, the research and advocacy director at CAIR. “Right now there is an unusually vicious targeting of students that support Palestine, and the volume and intensity is something I haven’t witnessed before.”

Saylor said CAIR is particularly concerned about the young people on US university campuses who have faced fierce harassment and threats for expressing solidarity with the people of Palestine.

Blurry black fence in close foreground, with shadowed people in uniform and the white dome of the Capitol in the setting sun.
US Capitol police gather in response to a call for a ‘day of rage’ on 13 October 2023 in Washington DC. Photograph: Win McNamee/Getty Images

Harvard’s Palestine Solidarity Committee last week issued a letter in which the signatories stated they “hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence”. The events, they said, “did not occur in a vacuum”. An affirmation of the letter from other student groups lamented “the devastating and rising civilian toll” of the violence, noting that the Israeli government’s treatment of Palestine created “conditions of violence”.

After the statement was released, backlash ensued because many Jewish students took issue with their peers blaming only Israel for the violence and felt the letter supported Hamas by not being critical of the attacks or sympathizing with Hamas’s innocent victims.

On Wednesday, a billboard truck drove near the Harvard University campus, displaying the names and faces of students who had signed the committee’s letter.

“They’re not targeting longtime activists who are used to harassment,” Saylor said. “You’re going after the people whose careers are just starting, who have barely entered the adult world, who probably aren’t full-time activists right now.”

He called the truck an act of “political intimidation”.

“This is the most tense campus has ever been by far,” Hejir Rashidzadeh, a Harvard law student, told ABC News.

On Twitter, the billionaire hedge fund CEO Bill Ackman asked Harvard University to release the names of students who signed the letter “to insure none of us inadvertently hire any of their members”.

As Arab and Muslim student activists steeled themselves against harassment and doxxing, many Jewish Americans feared rising violence on Friday after a former Hamas leader, Khaled Mashal, called for a global day of “anger” to send a “message of rage to Zionists and to America”.

Major US cities including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington DC have even stepped up security for residents ahead of expected protests.

The Anti-Defamation League, a Jewish advocacy group that battles antisemitism, said in a statement on Friday that it “has reviewed this information in close coordination with our partners in law enforcement and Jewish security organizations”.

“At this time, the Center on Extremism is not aware of any credible threats to Jewish communities in the United States,” the statement said.

Still, Jewish Americans are worried for their safety. The Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project, which tracks incidents of bigotry and prejudice in the United States, has spent the past few years tracking a troubling spike in antisemitic sentiment, fueled by the country’s growing white nationalist movement.

Taken from above, a street full of people wearing the colors of the Israeli flag, light blue and white, and waving US and Israeli flags.
People gather for a ‘stand with Israel’ rally at Freedom Plaza in Washington DC on 13 October 2023. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

“Unfortunately, we’re seeing an alarming amount of antisemitic activity across the US in recent years, both explicitly in neo-Nazi organizing and in more coded conspiracies and Holocaust revisionism,” Rachel Carroll Rivas, the deputy director of research, reporting and analysis at SPLC’s Intelligence Project, told the Guardian. “This has made the country ripe for manipulation during the Israel-Hamas conflict.”

Earlier this week, Twitter users in Irvine, California, posted images of a man carrying a Nazi flag. In the immediate aftermath of the Hamas attacks on Israel, a protester at a pro-Palestine event in New York City held up a phone with an image of a swastika on it.

“This moment is profoundly isolating and scary for our people,” said Audrey Sasson, the executive director of Jews for Racial & Economic Justice.

Sasson said many members of her progressive Jewish organization are still trying to locate loved ones in Israel.

“We are close to this pain,” said Sasson, who herself has friends and family currently in Israel. “We can worry and mourn for the Israeli people we’ve lost while also holding compassion for the people of Gaza who are currently under siege.”

Israel’s military has ordered the population of northern Gaza, numbering more than 1 million people, to evacuate before an expected ground invasion, a task the United Nations has said would be “impossible without devastating humanitarian consequences”.

The destruction of Gaza, which has been widely shared by the Israeli government’s owned social media accounts, is alarming to Jewish Americans like Sasson.

“I think we as American Jews can and should be allowed to mourn for our loved ones in Israel, while also turning to the Israeli government to say, not in my name should you be starving and bombing an entire civilian population in Gaza,” she said. “I wish that was not a controversial thing to say.”

Many Palestinian Americans worry that violence and threats against their community will skyrocket without more voices like Sasson’s.

“It’s as if the Hamas attacks were the beginning of the conflict, and everything before that never happened,” said Ussama Makdisi, a professor of history at University of California at Berkeley.

Makdisi noted “how quickly and strongly” US corporate, university and political leaders expressed sympathy for victims of violence in Israel.

“But they have not expressed any kind of empathy for Palestinian victims of violence,” he said. “It is dehumanizing. The silence in the face of genocidal violence devalues Palestinian life, and it sends a message to Palestinian Americans: you’re on your own.”

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.