Excerpt:
A study published by a German federal entity said that anti-Semitism in Europe is unaffected by recent Muslim immigration, prompting a prominent critic to call the report selective and flawed.
The claim appeared in a study published this month by the Berlin-based EVZ foundation featuring research by the University of London's Pears Institute for the Study of Antisemitism.
It sought to measure how the arrival of more than 2 million people from the Middle East and Africa since 2011 has affected expressions of anti-Semitism in five Western European countries.
"Neither the analysis of existing data nor of the interviews undertaken for this report suggests a significant connection" between the immigrants' arrival and "the extent and character of antisemitism in Western Europe," the researchers wrote in the report titled "Antisemitism and Immigration in Western Europe Today, Is there a connection?"