A new survey finds that 57% of Jewish adults in the United States — approximately 3.3 million people — experienced antisemitism in the past year, according to the data. The figure highlights the scale of anti-Jewish hostility in America, described by the source as a 'wake-up call' for the Jewish world.
A new survey indicates that 57% of Jewish adults in the United States — an estimated 3.3 million people — experienced an antisemitic incident in the past year, according to data shared Thursday. The figure comes amid what multiple sources describe as a sustained surge in antisemitism across the West. As The Zioneer has reported, Germany recorded 8,725 antisemitic incidents in 2025, the highest annual tally on record, while President Isaac Herzog recently warned that antisemitism 'is again raising its head' in Europe. The U.S. survey, which has not yet been independently corroborated by a second source in this bulletin, paints a picture of a diaspora Jewish community facing broad-based hostility. The data point is consistent with a wider trend of rising anti-Jewish incidents globally since late 2023. The precise methodology and sponsoring organization of the survey have not been disclosed in the initial report.
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