Anti-Semitism is on the rise in eastern Europe but steady in its west, according to the results of a survey by the New York-based Anti-Defamation League.


About one in four Europeans hold anti-Semitic beliefs, with such attitudes on the rise in eastern countries and mostly steady in the west, according to a survey.

The poll of 14 European countries, done for the New York-based Anti-Defamation League, found anti-Semitic attitudes most prevalent in Poland, where such sentiment rose to 48 per cent of the population from 37 per cent in 2015, and Ukraine, where the rise was even greater, to 46 per cent from 32 per cent in 2016.

Anti-Semitic views in Hungary were little changed but remained high, increasing from 40 per cent to 42 per cent.

The governments of all three countries have been criticised by Jewish groups recently, though all deny being anti-Semitic.

For example, Ukraine's decision last year to honour a nationalist leader whose movement sided with the Nazis during the Second World War drew sharp remarks from Israel's ambassador, and in Hungary the nationalist government of Viktor Orban has been widely criticised for its campaign against Jewish financier George Soros.

In early 2018, Poland saw an explosion of anti-Semitic language in public life, expressed on public television and even by public officials, after the conservative, nationalist ruling party passed legislation banning certain kinds of Holocaust speech, which was seen in Israel as an attempt to whitewash the participation of some Poles in the Holocaust.

In Western Europe, the study found that anti-Semitic views were either stable or down, with decreases in Britain, Spain, Netherlands, Italy, Germany and Austria.

The survey, conducted between April 15 and June 3 with a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 per cent, comes at a time of growing concern over anti-Semitic attacks in Europe.

They focused primarily on long-held anti-Semitic tropes such as the Jews' influence global finance and medicine, prejudices that have been used by the Nazis and others to incite hatred.