The move follows 3,700 antisemitic incidents in 2025, two stabbings in Golders Green last week, and arson attacks on synagogues, Jewish businesses and a Jewish ambulance service in London.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said British Jews were afraid to show their identity, attend synagogue, study at university or send children to school openly as Jews.
The report says antisemitic incidents surged after the 7 October 2023 attacks, with nearly 4,300 cases that year, and warns similar anti-Jewish violence is increasingly visible in the United States.
With security for Jewish sites at an all-time high, what will it take to address the ideological roots of this resurgent ancient hatred?
As AI-generated propaganda fuels online hate, can technology be retooled to protect communities instead of targeting them?