A lecturer at Northwestern University was given the Nazi salute last month by a passerby, the student newspaper The Daily Northwestern reported.

According to the report, the Jewish Studies teacher was walking near the school’s Hillel Center on the evening of November 23, when a passenger in a black SUV asked him for directions to the Jewish campus organization.

After the lecturer complied, the man asked him whether he is Jewish. When he said yes, the man leaned out the window, performed the salute and said, “Heil Hitler.”

Michael Simon, executive director of Northwestern’s Hillel, called the incident an act of “blatant antisemitism,” and told the paper that he has been in touch with University Police (UP) to increase security patrols near Jewish buildings, including the campus Chabad House and Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity house.

UP Deputy Chief Gloria Graham said that though the salute was caught on security camera, it was too dark to identify the person who performed it.

This is the latest in what The Algemeiner has reported is an “unprecedented” spike in antisemitism on American campuses in the aftermath of the presidential elections.  

According to campus watchdog group the AMCHA Initiative, the three weeks following the election saw some 40 cases of antisemitic incidents — mostly involving swastika graffiti and scrawling of anti-Jewish slurs — with many Jewish students feeling “vulnerable.”

Responding to mounting Jew-hatred on college campuses, US lawmakers presented a congressional bill aimed at curbing antisemitism. As The Algemeiner reported, the motion — entitled the Antisemitism Awareness Act of 2016 — was unanimously passed in the Senate last week and was recentlyintroduced in the House.