FILE - People hold a march against anti-Semitism near a monument commemorating the victims of one of the biggest single massacres of Jews during the Nazi Holocaust, in Kyiv, Ukraine, April 13, 2018.
BERLIN - A new survey shows about one in four Europeans holding anti-Semitic beliefs, with such attitudes on the rise in eastern countries and mostly steady in the west.
The poll of 14 European countries released Thursday by the New York-based Anti-Defamation League found anti-Semitic attitudes most prevalent in Poland, Ukraine and Hungary, with more than 40% of the respondents in each country expressing such views.
The governments of all three countries have been criticized by Jewish groups recently, though all deny being anti-Semitic.
In western Europe, the study found anti-Semitic views were either stable or down, with decreases in Britain, Spain, Netherlands, Italy, Germany and Austria. Denmark and Belgium saw minor increases, while France was unchanged and Sweden had the lowest rate, at 4%.
Italy and Austria both posted significant decreases.