In recent years, UK university campuses have witnessed a troubling normalization of antisemitism, particularly since the Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023. A landmark survey by the Union of Jewish Students (UJS) reveals that one in five students would be reluctant to share accommodation with a Jewish peer, highlighting deep-seated prejudices affecting everyday student life. This phenomenon, detailed in the UJS 'Time for Change' report, underscores a broader crisis where Jewish students face social ostracism, intimidation, and disrupted learning environments across higher education institutions.
🚨 The Surge in Antisemitic Incidents Post-October 2023
The Hamas terror attacks on October 7, 2023, marked a turning point for antisemitism on UK campuses. The Community Security Trust (CST), a charity monitoring antisemitic incidents, recorded a dramatic 117% increase in university-related cases from 2022/23 to 2023/24, totaling 325 incidents over two years. This spike included 85 incidents in October 2023 alone—the highest monthly figure ever—with abusive behaviour comprising 81% of cases, followed by threats, damage, and assaults.
Incidents spanned 33 cities, with hotspots in London (100 cases), Leeds (34), and Nottingham (19). Online antisemitism exploded by 886%, reflecting how digital platforms amplify hatred. Physical assaults, though fewer (10 total), involved eggs thrown at Jewish students in St Andrews and spitting incidents. Damage targeted Jewish centres, like graffiti on Leeds Hillel House proclaiming 'IDF off campus'. These events have created a pervasive atmosphere of fear, prompting many Jewish students to avoid certain areas or societies.
📊 Revelations from the UJS 'Time for Change' Survey
Published on March 16, 2026, the UJS report draws from a nationally representative poll of 1,000 students across 170 UK higher education institutions, conducted by JL Partners from January 26 to February 4, 2026. Shocking findings include:
- 20% of students reluctant or unwilling to houseshare with Jewish peers—a stark indicator of normalized discrimination.
- 23% witnessed targeting of Jews for their religion or ethnicity.
- 47% saw justification of the October 7 attacks; 49% observed glorification of Hamas or Hezbollah.
- 65% experienced learning disruptions from protests.
- 25% indifferent to Jewish students hiding their identity.
Trends were worse at Russell Group universities, where 79% described Israel-Palestine discussions as 'intimidating or toxic', and 51% felt unsafe debating politically. Half of respondents felt socially pressured on the conflict, with 33% avoiding engagement altogether. For deeper insights, see the full Guardian coverage.
Personal Impacts: Social Isolation and Safety Concerns
Jewish students, numbering around 10,000 across the UK, report profound effects. The UJS testimonies describe verbal abuse, physical chases, and strained friendships—26% knew of or experienced distancing from Jewish peers, rising to 36% at elite universities. Social media ads for flatmates excluding 'Zios' (Zionists) exemplify casual prejudice.
StandWithUs UK's 2025 report amplifies this, with students hiding Jewish symbols, avoiding Hebrew speech, or relocating for safety. At universities like King's College London, group chats threatened 'Zionists'; at Queen Mary, vigils faced 'Globalise the Intifada' chants. Mental health suffers, with isolation mirroring broader societal pressures. Concrete examples include doxxing at Manchester and swastikas dismissed at City St George's.
Case Studies: Disturbing Incidents Across Campuses
The CST's detailed Campus Antisemitism Report (2022-2024) logs assaults in Cambridge and Exeter, vandalism in Oxford and Sussex. StandWithUs documents systemic failures: at Birmingham, memorials deemed 'provocative'; at Imperial, 'Global Intifada' chants deemed free speech.
| University | Incident Type | Date Range |
|---|---|---|
| Leeds | Graffiti on Hillel House | 2023/24 |
| St Andrews | Assault (eggs thrown) | 2023/24 |
| Manchester | Doxxing and threats | Post-Oct 2023 |
| LSE | Event disruptions | 2024 |
These cases illustrate how protests, while lawful, cross into harassment when targeting Jewish students indiscriminately.
University Leadership: Responses and Criticisms
Universities UK (UUK) asserts collaboration with UJS and CST to combat antisemitism, issuing practical guidance. The Office for Students (OfS) mandates IHRA definition adoption and can sanction non-compliant institutions. However, critics like UJS President Louis Danker decry 'piecemeal progress', with complaints often ignored or delayed.
Examples of action include Goldsmiths' apology for a 'culture' of antisemitism. Yet, StandWithUs reports dismissals like swastikas as 'Hindu symbols', eroding trust.
Government Interventions and Regulatory Shifts
On March 4, 2026, the UK Government launched an independent review into antisemitism in English schools and colleges, led by Sir David Bell, with recommendations due Autumn 2026. This addresses doubled school incidents since 2023. For higher education, a 'campus cohesion charter' promotes shared values, alongside extremism crackdowns.
Broader measures include IHRA definition enforcement and police-university cooperation, responding to CST's sustained high levels into 2025.
Voices from Stakeholders: Calls for Urgent Reform
Lord Daniel Finkelstein warns universities fail liberal democracy by ignoring bullying. Baroness Luciana Berger questions future campuses for her children. Karen Newman of the Board of Deputies laments peer rejection. UUK's Vivienne Stern vows no tolerance for abuse. These perspectives urge balanced free speech with safety.
Pathways to Solutions: UJS and CST Recommendations
The UJS outlines six priorities:
- University accountability for hate crimes.
- Oversight of students' unions.
- Clear protest guidelines.
- Counter-extremism strategies.
- Police-government partnerships.
- Training on antisemitism identification.
CST adds impartial investigations, IHRA training, and timely responses. Implementing these could restore inclusive environments.
Looking Ahead: Building Resilient Campuses
With incidents at historic highs, UK higher education faces a pivotal moment. Proactive leadership, education on Jewish history, and dialogue fostering mutual respect offer hope. As Jewish students seek safety alongside peers, collaborative efforts will define whether campuses reclaim their role as bastions of enlightenment or succumb to division. Stakeholders must act decisively for a cohesive future.
Photo by Ile Ristov on Unsplash




