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Pittsburgh synagogue shooting evidence of increased anti-Semitism in US: ADL

2:20
Synagogues across US on high alert after shooting
Gene J. Puskar/AP
ByLuke Barr
October 29, 2018, 10:07 PM

In August 2017, white supremacists and alt-right protesters shouted "Jews will not replace us" as they marched on the campus of the University of Virginia.

The school that Thomas Jefferson founded had become the scene of anti-Semitic chants.

In that same year, the Anti-Defamation League reported a 57 percent increase in the number of anti-Semitic incidents.

For the first time since 2010, there was an anti-Semitic incident in every state - New York had the most with 380, the ADL said.

A woman brings flowers to a memorial, Oct. 28, 2018, near the Tree of Life synagogue after a shooting there left 11 people dead in Pittsburgh, Oct. 27, 2018.
Dustin Franz/AFP/Getty Images

In total, according to the ADL, there were 1,986 incidents in 2017, 1,267 in 2016 and 941 in 2015.

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(MORE: 'Screw the optics, I'm going in': Alleged synagogue shooter posts on social media moments before massacre)

These anti-Semitic incidents came to a head when authorities say Robert Bowers entered the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh just before 10 a.m. this past Saturday morning and killed 11 people.

"This is the deadliest attack on the Jewish community in the history of the United States," the ADL said in a statement.

Jewish leaders decried the attack and saw it as more evidence hate is growing in the country.

“I think this is another example of hate in our country that just doesn’t go away. I’m afraid we’re going down the wrong path. Hate has to stop,” Rabbi Hazzan Jeffery Meyers the Rabbi at the Tree of Life synagogue told WVPI, an ABC affiliated tv station.

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John Cohen, an ABC News contributor and former Department of Homeland Security acting undersecretary, said that in "this threat environment," politicians should use caution about what they say - because their words matter.

"The words they use can actually inspire violence by those who are prone to violence and who are simply searching for a cause to justify it," Cohen said.

That hate, the numbers show, has been increasing steadily the past few years.

The FBI has reported, in its most complete numbers, that hate crimes across the board were up 4 percent and showed patterns of increase.

In 2016, there were 6,121 hate crimes, up from 5,850 in 2015.

Further, a report released by the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino found that hate crimes in the largest U.S. cities rose 12.5 percent in 2017 - making it the fourth year in a row that hate crimes have increased.

Los Angeles, followed by Phoenix, Arizona had the most hate crimes by city, according to the study.

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(MORE: President Trump to visit Pittsburgh Tuesday in wake of synagogue shooting)

Last year, the FBI and Homeland Security officials repeatedly issued intelligence bulletins to police around the country warning that quote "lone actors and small cells within the white supremacist movement likely will continue to pose a threat of lethal violence."

The bulletins noted that the violence will often be "spontaneous" and "opportunistic," limiting "prevention by law enforcement."

Police across the country are stepping up patrols around synagogues in the wake of the Pittsburgh shooting.

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