King Charles was greeted by cheering crowds on ​Thursday when he visited an area of London which has suffered a spate of antisemitic attacks in recent weeks, in a show of support for Britain’s fearful Jewish communities.The monarch ⁠met two victims of a recent stabbing attack when he made the unannounced visit to Golders Green, which is home to a sizeable Jewish population and has borne the brunt of the recent antisemitic incidents across the ⁠British capital.“Thank you, your majesty, for ​coming ⁠today to Golders Green to bring comfort and encouragement to our Jewish community!” Britain’s Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis, who was ⁠there to greet the king, said on X.Last month, two Jewish ​men ⁠were stabbed in the area ‌in an attack being treated by police as terrorism, while in other incidents in Golders Green, four Jewish community ambulances were torched and ‌a memorial wall targeted.During his trip, ‌Charles met the two stabbing victims at a Jewish Care charity center as well as other religious and civic leaders.King Charles III meets stabbing victim Michael Shine and his sister Doreen during a visit Thursday to a Jewish community center in Golders Green.Richard Pohle / Pool via Getty ImagesThe visit was Charles’ latest demonstration of backing ⁠for the Jewish community, after he visited a synagogue in northern England following an attack last year that left two worshippers dead and agreeing in March to become the patron of a charity that provides security for Britain’s estimated 290,000 Jews.The recent attacks have led Mirvis to say the Jewish community was facing a sustained campaign of ‌violence and intimidation.The government has also raised its national terrorism ​threat level to “severe” from “substantial” with Prime Minister Keir Starmer saying Jewish ‌people were living in ⁠fear.The king’s visit comes on the same day that ⁠an article written by his younger son Prince Harry was published. In the article, the prince said ‌a rise in antisemitism ​in Britain was deeply troubling.Harry warns over antisemitismIn an article for the New Statesman magazine, Harry, 41, issued ⁠thinly veiled criticism of policies of the Israeli government, but said legitimate protest should not spill over into hatred.“Across the country, we are seeing a deeply troubling rise in anti-Semitism,” he wrote. “Jewish communities — families, children, ordinary people – ⁠are being made to feel unsafe in ​the ⁠very places they call home. That should alarm us, but also unite us.”Prince Harry at the Kyiv Security Forum last month.Andrii Khodkov / Global Images Ukraine via Getty In his article, Harry, who ⁠did not refer to Israel directly, said there was “deep and justified alarm at the scale of loss in the Middle East” and that images of destruction from Gaza, Lebanon and elsewhere had “shaken people to their core.”“We have seen how legitimate protest against state actions in the Middle East does exist alongside hostility toward Jewish communities at home — just as we have also seen ‌how criticism of those actions can be too easily dismissed or ​mischaracterised,” said Harry, who now lives in California.“Nothing, whether criticism of ‌a government or the reality of ⁠violence and destruction, can ever justify hostility toward an entire people ⁠or faith.”The prince was himself pilloried for wearing a Nazi uniform to a costume party 20 ‌years ago and ​also acknowledged this.“I am acutely aware ‌of my own past mistakes – thoughtless actions ​for which I have apologised, taken responsibility and learned from,” he said.