![Ireland support for Palestinians has country's Jews on edge](https://www.americanmarconiwirelessnews.com/media/shared/articles/0f/27/76/Ireland-support-for-Palestinians-ha-479213.jpg)
-
Navalny's legacy dims among young Russians he once galvanised
-
Concern as orangutan seen roaming Indonesia coal site
-
'Progress' in push to salvage Israel-Hamas truce: Palestinian sources
-
UK economy picks up, boosting govt amid US tariffs
-
Germany's Commerzbank to cut jobs to fight off UniCredit
-
Suspected gas explosion kills four at Taiwan department store
-
'Messengers of peace' - refugee Asian Games snowboarders fly Afghan flag
-
Western tour operators enter North Korea for first time since pandemic
-
Cinema can be a 'refuge', Berlin film festival director says
-
Sony hikes profit forecast on strong gaming business
-
US Senate to OK vaccine critic Kennedy as health secretary
-
Syrian migrant drama opens Berlin film festival
-
Four dead in Taiwan department store blast
-
Hurricanes name four captains for Super Rugby season
-
Suaalii-led Waratahs brimming with confidence ahead of Super Rugby season
-
The Italian mums who 'poisoned' their children
-
Ireland support for Palestinians has country's Jews on edge
-
Trump threats to South Africa rattle automakers
-
Afghan faces trial over deadly knife attack on German policeman
-
North Korea destroys family reunion centre in 'inhumane act', Seoul says
-
North Korea demolishing family reunion centre, Seoul says
-
Asian stocks rise, oil falls as Trump fans Ukraine peace hopes
-
Saudi art biennale seeks to modernise Islamic tradition
-
Tens of thousands go hungry in Sudan after Trump aid freeze
-
South Korea's Yoon back in court for impeachment hearing
-
Chinese authorities play cash-giving Cupid to boost marriage rates
-
Musk's DOGE team raises major cyber security concerns
-
New York, Paris, Berlin to mark anniversaries of iconic Christo art
-
Facing egg shortage, Americans bring chickens home to roost
-
South Korea's Yoon back in court over impeachment bid
-
Grenade blast in French bar wounds 12
-
NHL announces World Cup of Hockey will return in 2028
-
China's 2024 coal projects threaten climate goals: report
-
LINDIS BIOTECH AND PHARMANOVIA ANNOUNCE EUROPEAN MARKETING AUTHORISATION APPROVAL FOR CATUMAXOMAB, A FIRST-IN-CLASS TREATMENT FOR MALIGNANT ASCITES
-
Australian Open rules out mixed doubles changes after US Open furore
-
AP reporter again barred from Oval Office over 'Gulf of America'
-
Bayern sink Celtic as Feyenoord beat Milan in Champions League play-offs
-
McIlroy spoke to Trump on PGA-LIV deal, says new start needed
-
Liverpool's Van Dijk frustrated to draw Everton's 'cup final'
-
US stocks mostly lower on inflation, euro gains on Ukraine peace hopes
-
Trump and Putin set to meet in Saudi Arabia on Ukraine
-
Maignan clanger hands Champions League gift to fired-up Feyenoord
-
Benfica seize upper hand against Monaco in Champions League play-off
-
Liverpool held by Everton, four red cards in fiery last Goodison Park derby
-
Bayern sink Celtic to seize control of Champions League play-off
-
Everton strike late to hold Liverpool in last derby at Goodison Park
-
Trump is now head of top Washington cultural venue
-
Trump says to sign order on reciprocal tariffs today or tomorrow
-
White House says American among three detainees freed by Belarus
-
Argentine MLS striker Acosta traded to Dallas by Cincinnati
![Ireland support for Palestinians has country's Jews on edge](https://www.americanmarconiwirelessnews.com/media/shared/articles/0f/27/76/Ireland-support-for-Palestinians-ha-479213.jpg)
Ireland support for Palestinians has country's Jews on edge
Ireland's tiny Jewish community fears that growing anti-Israel hostility since the start of the Gaza war is leading to increased anti-Semitism, raising questions about their future in the EU country.
Ireland has been among the most outspoken critics of Israel's response to the October 7, 2023 attacks on southern Israel by Hamas militants that sparked the war in Gaza.
Polls since the start of the war have shown overwhelming pro-Palestinian sympathy in Ireland.
A survey in June by the news site The Journal found that 76 percent of Irish people believed the EU should impose economic trade sanctions on Israel over the conflict.
Protesters at rallies in Dublin told AFP they feel empathy with Palestinians due to Ireland's centuries-long history resisting British rule.
"Ireland has also suffered... repression," one marcher, 27-year-old Eoin Ross, told AFP shortly after the war began.
- Online abuse -
Although incidents of violence remain very low, "we've seen a lot of upsetting graffiti, things like 'kill Jews' or 'Zionists out of Ireland', and horrific anti-Semitism online," Ireland's chief rabbi Yoni Wieder told AFP.
Speaking at his Dublin synagogue, he said "at the rallies you'll also see people parading with Hamas and Hezbollah flags, but nothing is said about that".
Among Ireland's small community of about 3,000 Jews are families who laid down roots here as far back as the late 1800s.
Before October 7, "the amount of anti-Semitism was very, very low", said Maurice Cohen, who leads the Jewish Representative Council of Ireland (JRCI).
"The community felt really, really safe."
But the fraught Irish-Israeli relationship in recent months has strained nerves.
In May, Dublin joined several other European countries in recognising Palestine as a "sovereign and independent state".
It then joined South Africa's International Court of Justice case accusing Israel of committing genocide in Gaza -- charges angrily denied by Israeli leaders.
In December, Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar ordered the closure of its Dublin embassy, blaming Ireland's "extreme anti-Israel policies".
Ireland is "pro-human rights and pro-international law," replied then-prime minister Simon Harris.
- 'Anti-Semitic tropes' -
The Hamas attack in October 2023 resulted in the deaths of 1,211 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP of official Israeli official figures. The militants also took 251 hostages.
Israel's retaliation aimed at eliminating Hamas has killed more than 48,000 people in Gaza.
After the October 7 attack, posters in Dublin sympathising with the Israeli hostages were quickly defaced.
Only one explicitly anti-Semitic incident in Ireland has been recorded since the war began -- a pub bouncer who made discriminatory remarks against a Jewish customer -- according to the Irish Network Against Racism (INAR) group.
But INAR head Shane O'Curry told AFP that "under-reporting" by the Jewish community is likely.
In a statement to AFP, the Irish government said it "condemns racism and anti-Semitism in all its forms".
But it acknowledged "concerns about rising instances of anti-Semitism here, with online anti-Semitism being a particular problem".
- 'Unseen, unheard' -
In an art gallery he runs in Dublin, Oliver Sears, a British-born son of a Polish Holocaust survivor, told AFP that political rhetoric should be urgently dialled down.
"It doesn't take much. Somehow, one attack historically leads to another," said the 58-year-old who moved from London to Ireland in 1986, later setting up a "Holocaust Awareness Ireland" advocacy group.
The Dublin embassy closure was also a psychological blow, Sears told AFP.
"I'm not Israeli, but always had a sense that if they have an embassy here it can't be that bad," he said. But now, many Jews in Ireland are "for the first time ever thinking about where to go, just in case".
Cohen refutes claims by some in Israel that Ireland is a world leader in anti-Semitism.
"There is a nuanced anti-Semitism rather, one that is not understood by Irish people: demonisation of Israel gets to our core," he said.
At an address by Irish President Michael Higgins at a Holocaust Memorial Day commemoration, several audience members turned their backs in protest when he mentioned Gaza.
One of them, Lior Tibet, a tutor at University College Dublin, was dragged from the venue.
"Being physically removed from a Holocaust memorial event was shocking for me as a Jewish person," she told AFP.
"In other countries you listen to a minority, but Ireland doesn't listen to us at all, we feel unheard and unseen," she added.
O.Johnson--AMWN