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Separating the Message from the Messenger: How to Value Books Yet Disagree with the Authors' Positions

To what degree do an author’s objectionable comments, unrelated to their books, matter when being a consumer of those books? J.K. Rowling’s bestselling seven-volume Harry Potter books are cherished by children and adults alike. Rowling has sold more than 500 million copies and the books have inspired movies, theme parks, toys, collectibles, merch and more. According to a U.S. survey, 31% of people have read at least one of Rowling’s books, 18% of people have read all of…
Read more about Separating the Message from the Messenger: How to Value Books Yet Disagree with the Authors' Positions

ADL and Akerman File Federal Civil Rights Complaint Alleging Vast Pattern of Antisemitic Harassment in Bay County, Florida School

Press Release
Antisemitic tropes and swastikas in class, Sieg Heil salutes -- and no meaningful response from administrators New York, NY, April 23, 2026 … ADL (the Anti-Defamation League) and the Akerman law firm have filed a joint complaint with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights alleging a Jewish student was subjected to a sustained and continual pattern of antisemitic harassment while enrolled in the Bay County, Florida School District. The Title VI complaint alleges…
April 23, 2026
Read more about ADL and Akerman File Federal Civil Rights Complaint Alleging Vast Pattern of Antisemitic Harassment in Bay County, Florida School

ADL, Brandeis Center, Mayer Brown, and StandWithUs Welcome Concord-Carlisle Regional School District’s Settlement to Address Antisemitism

Press Release
New York, NY, April 20, 2026 — ADL (the Anti-Defamation League), the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, and a pro bono team at the law firm Mayer Brown welcome the April 15 resolution agreement between the Concord-Carlisle Regional School District and the U.S. Department of Justice requiring the district to take steps to address antisemitism and protect Jewish students.  The agreement follows a federal civil rights filing by attorneys from ADL, Brandeis Center, and…
April 20, 2026
Read more about ADL, Brandeis Center, Mayer Brown, and StandWithUs Welcome Concord-Carlisle Regional School District’s Settlement to Address Antisemitism

The Safety Divide: Open-Source AI Models Fall Short on Guardrails for Antisemitic, Dangerous Content

Report
An illustration of LLM data
ADL study finds popular open-source LLMs can easily be manipulated by malicious actors to produce antisemitic, extremist, and dangerous content amid weak safety guardrails.
December 09, 2025
Read more about The Safety Divide: Open-Source AI Models Fall Short on Guardrails for Antisemitic, Dangerous Content

Breaking the Building Blocks of Hate: A Case Study of Minecraft Servers

Report
Image from the videogame Minecraft
The first analysis of hate and harassment on Minecraft server data.
July 26, 2022
Read more about Breaking the Building Blocks of Hate: A Case Study of Minecraft Servers

The Nordic Resistance Movement

Report
Nordic Resistance Movement
Sweden’s leading right-wing extremist group: Violence, Antisemitism and International Connections. Acknowledgements: Contributing authors to this report were Jonathan Leman and Morgan Finnsiö of Expo Foundation, Stockholm, a valued ADL partner in the fight against extremism. The fanatically antisemitic Nordic Resistance Movement (NRM) is the Nordic region’s leading and most dangerous right-wing extremist group. Over the quarter-century of its existence, the NRM has…
March 21, 2022
Read more about The Nordic Resistance Movement

Top 10 Heartbreaking Moments of Hate in 2021, and How ADL Responded

Report
Capitol Insurrection
The year 2021 was marked by a series of heart-wrenching setbacks in the fight against hate around the world. From the Capitol insurrection on January 6 to brazen attacks on Jews, Asian Americans, and other marginalized groups in the streets of New York and Los Angeles, these events drew back the curtain on the prevalence of antisemitism and racism, fueled hatred in our communities and fostered division across society. Fortunately, they did not come without repercussions or a response…
December 20, 2021
Read more about Top 10 Heartbreaking Moments of Hate in 2021, and How ADL Responded

Top 10 Moments of Inspiration and Hope in 2021

Report
Amanda Gorman recites her 2021 inaugural poem, "The Hill We Climb"
As the year draws to a close, ADL looks back on the moments from 2021 that gave us hope and encouragement that our hundred-plus-year fight against antisemitism and hate is making progress. And there were plenty of big, inspirational moments to choose from in 2021: A $26 million verdict against the white supremacists responsible for Charlottesville; the launch of a $1.1 billion foundation to help prevent Anti-Asian hate crimes; and meaningful legal victories against racially motivated…
December 20, 2021
Read more about Top 10 Moments of Inspiration and Hope in 2021

White Supremacist Propaganda Spikes in 2020

Report
White Supremacist Propaganda Spikes in 2020
Propaganda from groups such as Patriot Front, New Jersey European Heritage Association, Folks Front, and the Nationalist Social Club ADL’s Center on Extremism (COE) tracked a near-doubling of white supremacist propaganda efforts in 2020, which included the distribution of racist, antisemitic and anti-LGBTQ fliers, stickers, banners and posters. The 2020 data shows a huge increase of incidents from the previous year, with a total of 5,125 cases reported (averaging more than 14…
March 15, 2021
Read more about White Supremacist Propaganda Spikes in 2020

The Decade's Top 10 Moments of Hope

Report
Words Matter, End Hate
Even in times of tragedy, there are glimmers of humanity. These moments of compassion, of kindness, give us hope for a better future for our children and our children’s children. Building a better world is what has motivated ADL’s work for more than 100 years, and what continues to impel us forward today. With that in mind, ADL’s professionals across the country have selected the decade’s Top 10 Moments of Hope in the United States. It’s hard to fathom how…
December 19, 2019
Read more about The Decade's Top 10 Moments of Hope

The Decade's Top 10 Incidents of Hate

Report
charlottesville decade of hate
From the Boston Marathon Bombing in 2013 to the white supremacist shooting in El Paso earlier this year, from the detention and dehumanization of immigrant children at the border to the largest anti-Semitic attack in United States history last year, this decade was bookended and interspersed by a series of all-too-frequent tragedies, many perpetrated by extremists from across the ideological spectrum and others the result of wrongheaded government policy. Over the past decade, seven of the top…
December 19, 2019
Read more about The Decade's Top 10 Incidents of Hate

Top 10 Moments of Hate of 2019

Report
el paso
Hate-fueled mass shootings horrifyingly make up half of our 2019 Top Ten Incidents of Hate List. Three of the shootings took place in houses of worship: two synagogues, and two mosques. One of those shootings was on the holiest day of the year, Yom Kippur. Three perpetrators were white supremacists, two are believed to have ties to an anti-Semitic sect of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement. Two shootings were overseas, three of them spanned both coasts of the U.S. Hate spread across the…
December 18, 2019
Read more about Top 10 Moments of Hate of 2019

Hate Beyond Borders: The Internationalization of White Supremacy

Report
We are witnessing the internationalization of the white supremacist movement. Over the past decade, we have seen surging violence in the United States, Europe and beyond motivated by elements of white supremacy from Anders Breivik in Norway to Brenton Tarrant in New Zealand to Patrick Crusius in El Paso, Texas. These killers influence and inspire one another. European and American adherents are learning from each other, supporting each other and reaching new audiences.  They feel…
September 17, 2019
Read more about Hate Beyond Borders: The Internationalization of White Supremacy

Global Anti-Semitism: Select Incidents in 2019

Report
December Argentina San Juan: Escuela Modelo de San Juan students reportedly made a Nazi-themed school project parodying Aqua’s “Barbie Girl” song. The school dismissed the teacher and had students study anti-Semitism in response Canada Montreal: A Jewish student at McGill University faced pressure to resign from her student government position for accepting Hillel Montreal’s invitation to travel to Israel and the West…
March 18, 2019
Read more about Global Anti-Semitism: Select Incidents in 2019

Murder and Extremism in the United States in 2018

Report
Each year, ADL’s Center on Extremism tracks murders perpetrated by all types of extremists. In 2018, every single extremist killing — from Pittsburgh to Parkland — had a link to right-wing extremism. This report provides key insights into the crimes, including motivations behind these violent attacks.
January 18, 2019
Read more about Murder and Extremism in the United States in 2018

2014 Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents

Report
The total number of anti-Semitic incidents in the United States increased by 21 percent in 2014 in a year marked by a violent anti-Semitic shooting attack targeting Jewish community buildings in Kansas and anti-Jewish expressions linked to the war in Gaza. The Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents counted a total of 912 anti-Semitic incidents across the U.S. during the 2014 calendar year. This represents a 21 percent increase from the 751 incidents…
January 31, 2014
Read more about 2014 Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents

The Islamic Republic of Iran – A History of Repressing Minorities

Backgrounder
The ongoing military conflict in Iran has the potential to reshape the country, not least for its diverse range of religious and ethnic minorities. While Iran has a deep and ancient history of religious and ethnic pluralism, the 1979 revolution set in motion almost five-decades of systematic persecution against the country's minority communities and Iranian women in the name of the Islamic Republic.     Since 1979, the Islamic Republic has imposed a theocratic order…
March 18, 2026
Read more about The Islamic Republic of Iran – A History of Repressing Minorities

271k

Hate Symbol
271k
271k is shorthand for a false assertion put forward by Holocaust deniers that only 271,000 Jews died in the Holocaust, rather than 6 million.

Alternate Names: 271,000; 271

271k is an antisemitic shorthand reference to a false claim made by Holocaust deniers that only around 271,000 Jews died during the Holocaust rather than the consensus view, based on exhaustive research, that the Nazis killed approximately six million Jews in their extermination campaign. 

The number 271,000 stems from a scanned image of part of a 1979 document often shared by Holocaust deniers. The document originated from what is today known as the Arolsen Archives, based in Germany, one of the largest repositories of records related to victims of Nazi persecution.  Often attributed to the Red Cross, which administered the Archives for many years, the document provided then-current statistics on the number of victims at 13 concentration camps that the repository had, upon request, confirmed as dead and issued death certificates for (often needed by next of kin to obtain insurance benefits, pensions, etc.). This number was slightly over 271,000 (Holocaust deniers may also circulate a similar document from 1984 with somewhat higher numbers). 

As the Arolsen Archives and others have explained, such documents did not list the total number of Jewish victims at these 13 locations, nor did they include victims from the many other concentration camps, death camps, and slave labor camps operated by the Nazi regime, nor figures for the vast numbers of victims who died in ghettoes or were shot outside of camps, especially in the Soviet Union.  Holocaust deniers, however, claim that the 271,000 figure represents the totality of Jews who perished under the Nazi regime; many deniers further assert that most of these victims were not killed by the Nazis but rather died of malnutrition or diseases like typhus because of the chaos and dislocation caused by the Allied strategic bombing of Germany in the final year of the war.  In other words, they falsely claim that few Jews died during World War II and that most of the deaths that did occur were the fault of the Allies, not the Nazis. 

The 271,000 claim is linked to an older false assertion originating with the West German far right in the 1950s that the Red Cross had ostensibly said Jewish victims of the Nazis had not numbered more than 300,000. The Red Cross has repeatedly refuted that fabricated claim. Holocaust deniers say that Canadian Holocaust denier Ernst Zundel uncovered the “271,000” document in the 1980s and used it (unsuccessfully) to defend himself in Canadian trials over his reprinting of a Holocaust denial pamphlet from Great Britain in the 1970s that repeated the older 300,000 claim. The image of the document was later used by other Holocaust deniers, eventually making its way to the internet, where it spread still further.  However, it was not until around 2024 that 271k and 271,000 emerged on social media as popular shorthand references to the false claim and as antisemitic references, generally.

Antisemites often use 271k in response to online posts about the Holocaust or the six million Jews who perished in it. Often it appears in language such as “271k at best,” “271k tops, mostly from typhus” or “271k is the best we can do.”  It also frequently appears in Holocaust denial memes designed to suggest that the mass murder of six million Jews in such a short time was impossible. One such meme features a worker in a pizza parlor saying “Six million pizzas?  The most we can make is 271k.”  Variations replace pizzas with other things, such as tea: “Six million cups in five years? Sorry, the most I can make is 271k.” Other memes feature images from the television show Pawn Stars, depicting pawn shop workers from the show saying, “Best I can do is 271,301.”  Some people use it to suggest more Jews should be killed, employing phrases such as “271k is not enough.”  Since its introduction, use of 271k as antisemitic shorthand has grown rapidly on social media.

As numbers, 271, 271k and 271,000 may have very different meanings in other contexts; they should always be evaluated carefully in the specific context in which they appear. 

Read more about 271k

ADL Announces New Toolkit to Fight Misinformation in K-12 Classrooms

Press Release
Online toolkit empowers parents and educators to identify biased and inaccurate materials on antisemitism, the Holocaust, and Jewish history New York, NY, January 14, 2026 – Today, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) launched an online toolkit to help parents and educators evaluate whether content on antisemitism, the Holocaust, Jewish identity, and history is accurate and unbiased. In an age of evolving technology, educators are drawing from a variety of sources to create curricula…
January 14, 2026
Read more about ADL Announces New Toolkit to Fight Misinformation in K-12 Classrooms

Advocating for Safe, Inclusive K-12 School Climates: Educator Guide

Tools and Strategies
Students learning from teacher
Empower K-12 educators to advocate against antisemitism from colleagues, unions, or students. Create safe, inclusive school climates through direct advocacy.
December 11, 2025
Read more about Advocating for Safe, Inclusive K-12 School Climates: Educator Guide

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