Two Years After Hamas Massacre, Global Antisemitism Explodes to Record High — “Never Again” Under Siege

A shocking CAM report reveals a worldwide surge in antisemitism since Hamas’s October 7 massacre — now normalized, violent, and global.

Two years after Hamas unleashed its barbaric October 7 massacre on Israel — the bloodiest attack on Jews since the Holocaust — a new global report by the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM) confirms that the hatred ignited that day has not faded. It has metastasized.

According to CAM’s Antisemitism Research Center, 13,339 antisemitic incidents were recorded worldwide between October 7, 2023, and October 1, 2025 — a staggering escalation that reveals a dark, global normalization of Jew-hatred.

The final quarter of 2023 alone nearly matched the total cases for all of 2022. By 2024, antisemitism shattered every previous record, surging past 6,300 incidents — double the year before. And 2025 has already documented over 5,100 incidents, with projections nearing 6,800 by year’s end.

In the United States, antisemitic acts on university campuses nearly tripled, rising from 249 in 2022 to 742 in 2024 — fueled by radicalized student groups parroting Hamas propaganda under the guise of “justice.” Similar waves of hate have struck in Boulder, Washington D.C., and Manchester, where Jewish lives were violently targeted.

“Two years after October 7, the wounds have not healed — and the hatred has not faded,” said Sacha Roytman Dratwa, CEO of CAM. “The Hamas massacre was not only an attack on Israel; it was a turning point for Jews everywhere. What followed was the largest surge in antisemitism in modern history — and that surge has not slowed. It has deepened, spread, and been excused.”

From graffiti and arson to assaults and institutional harassment, Jewish communities now face daily intimidation and threats, often disguised as “political protest.” Once confined to the extremist fringes, antisemitism has now entered the mainstream, poisoning universities, parliaments, and social networks alike.

“This is no longer a Jewish problem,” Dratwa warned. “It is a moral test for humanity. Silence is complicity — and silence is exactly what hatred feeds on.”

As the world marks the second anniversary of October 7, the call is clear: the battle against antisemitism is not only about defending Jews — it is about defending truth, decency, and the moral spine of civilization itself.

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