House subcommittee sets hearing on ‘worsening’ anti-Semitism

The chairman of the House subcommittee on human rights convened a hearing on anti-Semitism, saying it was worsening, especially in Europe.

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WASHINGTON (JTA) — The chairman of the House subcommittee on human rights convened a hearing on anti-Semitism, saying it was worsening, especially in Europe.

The hearing, called by U.S. Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), will take place Wednesday.

"It is getting demonstrably worse all over the world, but especially Europe," Smith, who also co-chairs the U.S. Helsinki Commission, the congressional body monitoring human rights, told JTA. "The Middle East is a cauldron of anti-Semitic hate, but much of that hatred is spilling out through the Muslim Diaspora and through satellite television."

Smith cited recent spikes in reported incidents of anti-Semitism in Britain and France, and noted that it emerges from the far left and right as well as from Islamists.

"This is one of the times when far right and far left meet at the end of the circle," he said.

The first panel to be heard by the committee will garner testimony from Mormon and Muslim experts on anti-Semitism in order to emphasize that the phenomenon is not a Jewish problem exclusively, Smith said.

Another panel will focus on Europe and include testimony from Rabbi Andrew Baker, the top official dealing with anti-Semitism at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, as well as experts from Hungary and Sweden.

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