Few anti-Semitic attacks in Russia - but sentiment is rife
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                  Euroasian Jewish News

                  Few anti-Semitic attacks in Russia - but sentiment is rife

                  Few anti-Semitic attacks in Russia - but sentiment is rife

                  31.10.2018

                  Russia saw fewer than 10 suspected hate crimes against Jews in the first half of 2018, a human rights watchdog critical of the government said in a report.

                  The publishing this week of the SOVA center’s report on anti-Semitism, which suggests a far lower risk to Jews in Russia than in Western Europe, coincided with the release of a PEW survey indicating far greater prevalence of anti-Semitic sentiment in Russia and other Eastern European countries than in the West.

                  In the PEW survey of 56,000 adults in 2015 and 2017 in 34 European countries, only 40 percent of Russians said they would not object to accepting a Jew into their family.

                  The figure in Western Europe ranged from 96 percent in the Netherlands to 57 percent in Italy. Acceptance levels in Eastern Europe were significantly lower, stretching from Slovakia’s 73 percent to Georgia’s 27. Only three Eastern European countries were above the 70 percent mark, compared to 11 countries in Western Europe, with Britain remaining at 69 percent.

                  The SOVA center’s report lists the torching in January of two cars belonging to a Jewish communal leader in Murmansk, in northwestern Russia, and the scrawling of an anti-Semitic graffiti on the headquarters of Ksenia Sobchak, who ran for president. In June, several gravestones were burnt at the Jewish cemetery in Voronezh, in southwestern Russia, the report said.

                  In neighboring Ukraine, dozens of anti-Semitic incidents are reported each year. In Western Europe, hundreds are reported each few months.

                  The SOVA center’s report was published ahead of the “Protecting the Future” conference in Moscow on anti-Semitism, attended by senior government officials and communal leaders, including Russian Jewish Congress President Yuri Kanner and Russian Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar.

                  “There will be no anti-Semitism and xenophobia in Russia, and the Russian authorities together with civil society will do everything that is necessary for it,” Valentina Matviyenko, the chairwoman of the Council of the Federation of Russia, the Russian parliament’s upper house, said in a speech during the conference.

                  Arutz Sheva