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Houses of Worship Rally on 'Stand Up Sunday' Against Antisemitism
Stand Up Sunday united over one million faith leaders to confront rising antisemitism, amid FBI reports showing Jewish people face nearly 70% of religious hate crimes.
- On Sunday, the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism and the Appeal of Conscience Foundation organized Stand Up Sunday, mobilizing over one million people of faith nationwide.
- FBI's 2024 crime statistics show hate crimes against Jewish people make up nearly 70 of religious-based incidents, while FCAS' proprietary research finds 25% antisemitic attitudes, increasing by 26 million in 18 months.
- More than five daily anti-Jewish hate crimes include assaults and vandalism, and the mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church and School in South Minneapolis exposed worshippers' vulnerability.
- Robert Kraft, Founder of the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism, said `Stand Up Sunday is about raising awareness, inspiring action, and standing together against hate`, urging houses of worship to unite against hatred.
- Since 2021, religious-based hate crimes have doubled, prompting FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice to classify such attacks as terrorism, while the multi-faith coalition response aims to inspire allies against hate.
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29 Articles
29 Articles

+27 Reposted by 27 other sources
"Stand Up Sunday" National Interfaith Coalition Calls for an End to Antisemitism and All Faith-based Hate
Appeal of Conscience Foundation and the Foundation to Combat Antisemitism Bring Together Interfaith Coalition of Religious Leaders and Houses of Worship to Stand Up Against Antisemitism and All Faith-based Hate
Coverage Details
Total News Sources29
Leaning Left2Leaning Right3Center9Last UpdatedBias Distribution64% Center
Bias Distribution
- 64% of the sources are Center
64% Center
14%
C 64%
R 21%
Factuality
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