UK launches review into school-related anti-Semitism

The flag of Israel (file image)
Attacks on ‌Jews have risen globally since Hamas' assault on Israel, which triggered the Gaza war. -AAP Image

Britain's government has launched an independent review into anti-Semitism in England's ‌schools and colleges, responding to data showing classroom-related incidents have ‌doubled since before Hamas' October  7,  2023 attacks on Israel.

Attacks on ‌Jews have risen globally since Hamas' assault on Israel, which triggered the Gaza war. 

Britain reported a four per cent annual increase in cases of anti-Semitism in 2025 - the second-highest ‌total on ‌record - ⁠including a sharp spike after a deadly ​synagogue attack in northern England in October.

The Community Security Trust, which advises Jewish communities on security, recorded 204 school-related anti-Semitic incidents in 2025, twice pre-2023 levels.

"The figures are ⁠stark and clear," ‌education ​minister Bridget Phillipson said in a statement on Wednesday.

She said "too ​many Jewish teachers ‌who raised concerns felt that nothing was done. That ​is not acceptable."

The government said the aim of the review was to assess how well ​education ​settings identify, prevent ​and respond to anti-Semitic behaviour, and ‌where further support was needed.

The review will examine schools' policies, how incidents are handled when they occur, what preventive measures are in place, and how external ​factors – including protests outside schools and wider geopolitical ​tensions - influence behaviour ⁠within education settings.