“Jewish communities—families, children, ordinary people—are being made to feel unsafe in the very places they call home. That should alarm us, but also unite us.” said the youngest son of King Charles III.
Britain has experienced a rise in antisemitic incidents, including an assault last month that saw two Jewish men stabbed in Golders Green, a predominantly Jewish area of London, and an attack on a synagogue in Manchester last year that left two people dead.
“Take the marches that happen regularly across Britain,” Starmer said after the attack in Golders Green. “Of course we protect freedom of speech and peaceful protests in this country but if you are marching with people wearing pictures of paragliders without calling it out you are venerating the murder of Jews.”
“For many, the instinct to speak out, to march, to demand accountability, to call for an end to suffering—is both human and necessary,” he said.
“We have seen how legitimate protest against state actions in the Middle East does exist alongside hostility toward Jewish communities at home—just as we have also seen how criticism of those actions can be too easily dismissed or mischaracterized,” he said.
“That means being unequivocal: standing against antisemitism wherever it appears, while recognizing that anti-Muslim hatred and all forms of racism draw from the same well of division. They must be confronted with the same resolve,” he emphasized.
The Community Security Trust (CST), a charity that works to “protect British Jews from terrorism and antisemitism,” recorded 3,700 reported antisemitic incidents in 2025—a 4% increase from the 3,556 logged the previous year.
Charles visited Golders Green on Thursday to meet Jewish victims of the stabbing and show support for the community.
Meanwhile, police in the capital are preparing for two rival protests set to take place in London this weekend, amid fears of a clash between pro-Palestinian marchers and attendees of a demonstration led by far-right activist Tommy Robinson.
The Metropolitan Police will deploy around 4,000 officers across central London in an effort to combat any risks.
"As part of that planning, we have been in ongoing discussions with organisers from both groups. We have been clear since the outset that we would not accept march routes or rally locations that would increase the risk of intimidation to any particular community or that would risk the two protests coming together.”
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