Global Antisemitism Surges 21% as Hate Spreads Beyond Campuses to Healthcare and Other Sectors
TL;DR
Elliott Broidy's ARCHER initiative provides a strategic advantage by exposing and disrupting antisemitic networks and their financiers globally.
The Combat Antisemitism Movement documented 554 incidents in July 2025, a 21.2% increase from 2024, averaging nearly 18 daily occurrences worldwide.
Combating antisemitism through education and initiatives like ARCHER creates a safer, more inclusive world for Jewish communities and upholds democratic values.
Healthcare workers in Italy discarded Israeli medicine while Australian nurses refused to treat Israeli patients, showing hatred infiltrating critical sectors.
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Elliott Broidy, Co-Chairman of the Fund to End Antisemitism, Extremism, and Hate, is warning of a 21.2% surge in global antisemitic incidents as Jewish communities prepare for the High Holy Days. According to the latest report from Combat Antisemitism Movement's Antisemitism Research Center, 554 antisemitic incidents were recorded worldwide in July 2025 alone—an average of nearly 18 incidents per day. This represents a dramatic increase from the 457 incidents documented in July 2024.
Broidy, Chairman and CEO of Broidy Capital Holdings, stated that these numbers demonstrate a clear and present danger to Jewish communities and democratic values worldwide. He emphasized that what is being witnessed is not random hatred but a systematic campaign to demonize Israel and, by extension, Jewish people everywhere. While U.S. campus incidents temporarily decreased during July's summer break—recording only nine incidents compared to record-high levels during the 2024-2025 academic year—Broidy warns that toxic ideologies incubated in university settings are now spreading into other professional spheres.
Broidy referenced his recent commentary on Harvard University's ongoing legal battle with the Trump administration over frozen federal research funding, noting that Harvard's refusal to implement meaningful reforms illustrates the depth of the problem. He pointed out that when elite institutions tolerate materials equating opposition to BDS with 'coded genocide' and allow medical students to 'discourage Zionist students from coming here,' it's unsurprising when this hatred appears in professional healthcare settings.
In a stark illustration of how campus-bred antisemitism is infiltrating critical sectors, Broidy highlighted recent shocking incidents in healthcare settings. In Italy, hospital staff in Tuscany were captured on video proudly discarding life-saving Israeli-made medicine, while in Australia, nurses made headlines for declaring they wouldn't treat Israeli patients—with one boasting of killing Israeli patients and making throat-slitting gestures. Broidy observed in his recent op-ed that these healthcare professionals would rather risk patients' lives than accept lifesaving treatment from Israel, describing it as pathological hatred that has overpowered all reason and professional ethics.
Broidy argues that these incidents reflect a broader pattern of systematic dehumanization that extends across multiple sectors—from healthcare and academia to entertainment and international law. He emphasized that government action alone cannot address this crisis and that combatting antisemitism will require continued support from private initiatives designed to combat extremism and educate future generations. Broidy stated his support for the Auschwitz Research Center on Hate, Extremism, and Radicalization (ARCHER) at House 88, which aims to expose and shut down the inciters of antisemitism, recruiters to violence, perpetrators of terrorism, and the networks that finance this activity.
As Jewish communities prepare for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, Broidy called for urgent action from multiple sectors. He demanded that universities implement meaningful reforms to restore academic freedom and eliminate discriminatory environments, with federal funding contingent on compliance with civil rights law. Medical institutions must enforce professional standards that prohibit discrimination based on patient nationality or the origin of medical treatments. Social media companies must address sophisticated disinformation campaigns that fuel antisemitic sentiment, particularly those originating from state actors like Iran. Governments must continue enforcement of civil rights protections and adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) Working Definition of Antisemitism by more jurisdictions.
Curated from 24-7 Press Release

