Refugees and anti-Semitism: is it a problem?

This is just one man's experiences on his own with newly arrived refugees from the Middle East that aren't a member of any community yet... They are displaced, and currently looking for a stable home. This seriously can't be compared to entire communities that exist of second, third, and fourth generation immigrants to Europe from the Middle East. Take Malmö in Sweden for example, a city that once had a thriving Jewish community, a community that was mostly made up of Holocaust survivor families and the descendants of Jews that were actually real refugees fleeing a war and persecution, unlike many of the economic migrants entering Europe pretending to be Syrians fleeing a civil war. This is now a city where religiously motivated attacks and harassment on Jewish people has doubled, a city where Jewish cemeteries are fire bombed and vandalised, a city where human rights organizations advice Jews to enter certain areas with extreme caution. Please remember that this city exists within a 2016 Sweden... And the issues don't stop there, it continues, and continues, and continues. With old Holocaust survivors being told they aren't welcome to tell their stories in schools with a majority Muslim population, being disrespected by students and called. Then Swedish politicans attending anti-Israel rallies where anti-Semitism and pro-Hamas/Hezbollah rhetoric is spewed out and distributed. It's not surprising that most Jewish families that used to live in Malmö have already emigrated to Israel, or other countries in the recent years, wouldn't you? This also isn't just one isolated community that's experiencing these types of problems, this phenomenon exists within communities all across Europe, you could go on and on. It's a problem.

/r/europe Thread Link - dw.com