• bananoidandroid
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    11 hours ago

    I respect thay you might have a different point of view based on your experiences. I also have family in the UK that so i’m there regularly and follow what is going on. But the fact is that of those that usually wear jewish symbols, 61% avoid wearing them on occasion for their safety and additionally according to this EU survey almost a third is considering emigrating (of the 12 countries surveyed the average was 38% so UK is slightly better than most countries for jews)

    https://fra.europa.eu/sites/default/files/fra_uploads/fra-2019-2nd-survey-on-discrimination-and-hate-crime-against-jews-in-eu-ms-country-sheet-uk_en.pdf

    Looking at hate crime rates since that survey, they have boomed since the october event.

    It does not suprise me at all that it is difficult to acknowledge that people with other backgrounds are subject to hate because that is how we are built. We rather look away and instead of finding out how the situation is, we go by how we feel things are which is why it is good to have statistical resources that paints a picture for the group as a whole.

    I acknowledge that jews probably have better chances with authorities than other minorities but that also is not the reason they don’t feel safe wearing their religious symbols.

    I hope you understand that i don’t want to make this a “they have it worse” thing. I want to show that their safety is not great, as here a third of their synagogue budgets go to private security. You can’t say that about any other group.