Hate crimes in New York state increase 196% in past year

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Hate crimes in New York state increase 196% in past year

JNS

“The Buffalo shooting is a reminder that there is a dark undercurrent of extremism in the Empire State,” said Mitch Silber, executive director at the Community Security Initiative.

Hate crimes in New York rose 196% in New York state from 2020 to 2021, with Jews being the target of 40% of all hate-crime incidents.

That was one of the conclusions of a new report, “Hate in the Empire State: Extremism & Antisemitism in New York,” issued jointly by the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism and the Community Security Initiative, a project of the UJA-Federation of New York and the Jewish Community Relations Council-NY.

The report’s release comes less than a month after the deadly mass shooting at a Tops supermarket in Buffalo, N.Y., in which 10 people were shot and killed, and others injured by an 18-year-old gunman with a history of white supremacism.

Among the other findings:

New York ranks seventh in the country for white-supremacist propaganda efforts, with recent actions being carried out by organized hate groups including Patriot Front, New Jersey European Heritage Association and the newly formed White Lives Matter.

The ongoing threat of extremist activity in New York State also includes a threat of violent extremism from foreign terrorist organizations, Islamist extremists and racially motivated violent extremists, all of whom promote anti-Semitic worldviews and regularly incite violence, targeting Jewish synagogues and community buildings.

Extremist groups such as militia groups and the Proud Boys have shifted their strategies to focus on the local level, disrupting school-board meetings and even running for elected positions.

Black Nationalist Extremism, as highlighted by the Black Hebrew Israelites and Nation of Islam, are both active in New York state and consider Jews to be “fake Jews.”

“Our report, which was in the works well before the attack in Buffalo, sheds light on myriad factors that have led to a serious and disturbing increase in hate in the Empire State,” said Scott Richman, ADL New York/New Jersey regional director. “As someone who was on the ground in Buffalo in the days since the attack, it pains me deeply to see how our black neighbors have suffered from this extremism. Now we have an opportunity to urge our lawmakers and community leaders to take action to stop hateful, violent acts from reoccurring in our state.”

Mitch Silber, executive director at the Community Security Initiative, said “New York has always been a symbol of diversity and openness, but the Buffalo shooting is a reminder that there is a dark undercurrent of extremism in the Empire State, and we need to shine a light into those dark corners.”

“Unfortunately, almost all of the indicators we use to monitor hate and extremism directed at Jewish New Yorkers are on the rise,” he continued. “This report illuminates that we need to be clear-eyed about the level of hateful activity both on the streets of Brooklyn and Manhattan, as well as among organized extremist groups in other parts of New York State.”

The report urges elected officials, law enforcement and the Jewish community to take a series of steps to address rising extremism and the increasing threat of domestic violent extremism.

ADL and CSI called on state officials and the governor to double funding to New York Hate Crimes Grant Program from $25 to $50 million to fund approximately 1,000 projects across the state. They also advocated for launching a commission on anti-Semitism that views the issue from the lenses of civil rights, intelligence and law enforcement, in addition to coming up with recommendations for comprehensive, whole-of-government responses to the challenge.

Photo by cottonbro: https://www.pexels.com/photo/person-holding-yellow-and-white-labeled-paper-3926747/


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