A Brooklyn writer recounts two recent encounters that left her feeling targeted as a Jewish New Yorker: graffiti reading Free Palestine defacing a favorite walking path, and a man on the Upper West Side who followed and harassed her and her husband with anti Israel taunts. She says such incidents have become so common that many victims no longer report them, fearing little will change.
The author argues that antisemitic attacks are rising across the United States and globally, citing assaults in cities such as Los Angeles and London, vandalism of synagogues and homes, and hostile protests outside Jewish institutions. She contends that repeated official statements of sympathy have not been matched by effective protective measures, leading to frustration and eroding trust among Jewish communities.
Warning against growing complacency, she urges Jews to reject the normalization of hostility and to demand the same level of security afforded to other citizens. While some are choosing self defense measures or considering relocation, she maintains that the deeper question is how much antisemitism society is willing to tolerate before declaring that enough is enough.

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