|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
Two years after Hamas’s barbaric October 7 massacre in Israel, a new global report by the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM) confirms that antisemitic incidents have not declined, they have intensified, spreading across borders and into the mainstream.
What began as a surge of hatred in the hours and days following the massacre has evolved into a sustained global epidemic. Over the past two years, antisemitism has become deadly, including in Washington, D.C., Boulder, Colorado, and, most recently, Manchester, England. Hatred of Jews, once the obsession of the fringes, has transformed into a public, normalized force endangering Jews around the world and the societies they live in.
Jewish communities across all regions now face intensifying threats to their safety and freedom, from violent attacks and vandalism to intimidation, harassment, and the denial of their right to live and worship without fear.
According to CAM’s Antisemitism Research Center (ARC):
- 13,339 antisemitic incidents were recorded worldwide between October 7, 2023, and October 1, 2025.
- In the final three months of 2023 alone, CAM documented 1,785 incidents, nearly as many as in all of 2022.
- 2024 set a record with 6,326 incidents, more than double the 2023 total.
- On U.S. campuses, incidents nearly tripled, from 249 in 2022 to 742 in 2024.
- 5,118 incidents have already been documented in 2025 (as of October 1).
Sacha Roytman, CEO of the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM), stated:
Two years after October 7, the wounds have not healed — and the hatred has not faded. The Hamas massacre was not only an attack on Israel; it was a turning point for Jews everywhere. What followed was the largest surge in antisemitism in modern history — and that surge has not slowed. It has deepened, spread, and been excused.
This is no longer a Jewish problem. It is a moral test for humanity. When Jews are targeted with impunity, every democratic value is endangered. Silence is complicity — and silence is exactly what hatred feeds on.
Every person must decide: turn away, or take a stand. Because the fight against antisemitism is the fight for truth, freedom, and human dignity itself. On this anniversary, we call on all people of conscience to confront lies, reject Jew-hatred, and ensure that ‘Never Again’ is not just a slogan — but a promise kept.
The full report is available HERE.







