On summer bank holiday weekend, Friday, August 1, 1947, antisemitic violence and rioting began.
In the age of liberal nationalism, Rosetti and Românul were condemning the spread of antisemitic violence and blood libel literature in Romania.
During the war years, antisemitic violence escalated in Boston.
Police defused bombs placed outside of La Opinión headquarters during a wave of antisemitic violence in August of that year.
The antisemitic communal violence began on August 2, 1819 in Würzburg and soon reached the outer regions of the German Confederation.
This propaganda resulted in an acceptance of anti-Communist violence at the time, though antisemitic violence was less approved of.
In Venezuela, growing antisemitism in the country, including antisemitic violence, caused an increasing number of Jews to make aliyah during the 2000s.
In 1917, in response to antisemitic violence at that time in Romania and elsewhere in Eastern Europe, he staged passages from Bialik.
Straucher subsequently used the Abgeordnetenhaus tribune for condemning the antisemitic violence linked with the various political changes.
In 2009, the Belgian city of Antwerp, often referred to as Europe's last shtetl, experienced a surge in antisemitic violence.