A/75/329
conspiracy theories have been propagated in many countries, including, for example,
Bulgaria, Iran (Islamic Republic of) and Iraq. 11
56. A Jewish cemetery in Finland and Jewish religious sites across the United States
were defaced with antisemitic graffiti; a Russian synagogue in the north-western city
of Arkhangelsk was subjected to an arson attack in mid-April 2020; and violent
threats against Jews on social media platforms in various states of the United States
were consistent with a Federal Bureau of Investigation warning sent to local law
enforcement authorities in March 2020 that online extremist groups were encouraging
members who became infected with COVID-19 to spread the virus to police and
Jews.12
57. The Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry, at Tel Aviv
University, reported Holocaust-associated terminology: for example, comparing
lockdown to the ghettos and using the German slogan “Arbeit macht frei” (“work
liberates” – which was on the gate to Auschwitz) to refer to release from it.
Anti-vaccine protesters wore the Nazi yellow star, replacing “Jew” with
“unvaccinated”, suggesting that they were persecuted and seen as disease spreaders –
as Jews were in Nazi Germany. This became so widespread that officials in Munich
prohibited wearing of the yellow star at demonstrations. 13
58. The rise in antisemitism must be understood in the context of broad and rampant
racism and other forms of hatred and intolerance affecting other groups as well.
Extremists are ready and able to exploit the fear and confusion that accompanies the
pandemic. As indicated in submissions received by the Special Rapporteur for the
present report, multiple incidents of racist and xenophobic violence continue to be
perpetrated by ethnonationalists, including neo-Nazis, skinheads and members of
other right-wing movements, against Asians, Muslims, Jews, Roma, LGBTQ persons,
migrants, refugees, foreign students, people of colour, indigenous and Afrodescendent
peoples, and other minority groups.
59. Submissions for the present report, and countless news and human rights
reports, are rife with examples of the widespread discrimination, harassment and
assault – online and physical – against persons of Chinese or Asian descent. In what
can be seen as an all-too-familiar attempt to normalize xenophobia and racism as
reasonable reactions to COVID-19, the President of the United States of America,
Donald Trump, dubbed it the “Wuhan flu” or the “China flu”. Online antisemites
perverted this to “Jew flu”, implying either that Jews were behind it or that it was
most closely associated with Jewish victims and spreaders. 14 On 14 March 2020, three
Burmese family members, including a 2-year-old and 6-year-old, were stabbed in a
grocery store in Texas by a man who said they were spreading the coronavirus. Many
other incidents have been recorded on video and published online, which involve not
only overt racism and physical attacks, but also attacks on public health. The US
Human Rights Network reported videos of people ripping face coverings and masks
off people of Asian descent, and spitting and coughing on their faces. 15 Jews have
been similarly assaulted; for example, a couple attacked a group of Hasidic Jews in
Brooklyn, New York, pulling masks from their faces and accusing them of spreading
COVID-19.16 The Community Security Trust, in the United Kingdom, reported far__________________
11
12
13
14
15
16
12/23
Ibid., pp. 2–3.
Submission from the Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights,
“COVID-19-related antisemitic incidents”, p. 4.
Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry, “The COVID-19 pandemic has
unleashed a unique worldwide wave of antisemitism”, press release, 23 June 2020, p. 10.
Community Security Trust, “Coronavirus and the plague of antisemitism”, p. 7.
US Human Rights Network submission.
Submission from the Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights,
“COVID-19-related antisemitic incidents”.
20-11206