Landmark report shows Italian Jewry fearful of antisemitism

A
new study published this week by JPR
(Institute for Jewish Policy Research)
demonstrates significant concern among Jews in Italy about antisemitism in
their country, with clear indications that many perceive it to be a growing
problem, particularly online. At the same time, most Italian Jews feel well
integrated into Italian society, antisemitic violence is rare, and only a
minority feels sufficiently unsafe to be considering their future in the
country.

 

The report, entitled From Old and New Directions: Perceptions and
experiences of antisemitism among Jews in Italy
, also highlights the
particular nature of antisemitism in the country. It indicates that today it is
more commonly grounded in political ideologies – from both the left and right –
than in religious extremism, suggesting that it is driven both by old style
right-wing nationalism, and newer forms of left-wing antipathy informed by a
spill-over of incidents in Israel and the Middle East.

 

The data in the report
were gathered and analysed by researchers at JPR, as part of a major study
commissioned by the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) in 2012.
The general findings from that study were published in a landmark report in
late 2013, but have been analysed afresh in this follow-up study, the second in
a series of JPR reports about antisemitism in different European Member States
(for the first in the series, on Jews in the UK, click here).

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