Polls conducted among U.S. Jews show a growing sense of fear due to antisemitism. Fighting back requires a new approach, one centered on finding partners in America, not focusing exclusively on our own concernsJo-Ann Mort 01:23 PM • July 14 2026 IDTA recent poll by the AP found that six in ten American Jews view anti-Semitism as a problem in the aftermath of October 7. The poll also shows that "about one-third of Jewish adults say they feel 'very' or 'somewhat' safe as a Jewish person in the U.S. today, while about one-third feel 'very' or 'somewhat' unsafe." Those who have a strong affinity to Israel feel most unsafe.Loading...Click the alert icon to follow topics:ZionismJews in AmericaAntisemitismSynagoguesCommentsLoading...In the NewsIn the News: Israel NewsIranMahmoud AhmadinejadLindsey GrahamStrait of HormuzRo KhannaIsrael ElectionsHaQuizHaaretz PodcastGerman MPs Join Global Pressure on Israel Over Jailed Gaza Doctor Abu SafiyaFrom 1948 to October 7: The ultra-Orthodox Draft Remains Israel's Fault LineKatz Seeks Pardon for Ex-troop Convicted of Killing Wounded Palestinian MilitantNew Study: Children of Female Holocaust Survivors Face Higher Schizophrenia RiskCase Closed Against Officer Suspected of Leaking Bibileaks Probe to PM's OfficeRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIInside the Mossad Plot to Install Ahmadinejad as Iran's LeaderThe Original Tradwives of Ancient RomeMade in Kurdistan, Smuggled via Jordan: The Mysterious Firearms Flooding IsraelEgypt Lost the World Cup. But Was the Referee Really Jewish?Inside the German pro-Israel Lobby's Campaign to Defund UNRWARo Khanna, U.S. Lawmaker & Israel Critic, Says West Bank Settlers 'Detained' Him