In an era of surging antisemitism across Western democracies, the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM) has launched one of the most consequential tools in the modern fight against Jewish hatred: the "Report It" app, a mobile platform enabling users anywhere in the world to document antisemitic incidents anonymously and in real time. The app represents a paradigm shift in how civil society confronts organized hate — moving from passive awareness to active, data-driven accountability. With antisemitic incidents reaching record highs in the United States, Europe, and beyond since October 7, 2023, the stakes for such a tool have never been greater. CAM's call to action — "See it. Report it. Stop it." — is not merely a slogan but a structured civic framework for combating one of history's oldest hatreds.
The Combat Antisemitism Movement: Origins and Mission
The Combat Antisemitism Movement was founded in 2018 as a nonpartisan, global coalition uniting Jewish and non-Jewish organizations around a single, urgent mission: the elimination of antisemitism worldwide. CAM has grown to represent hundreds of partnering organizations across dozens of countries, making it one of the broadest civil-society coalitions ever assembled specifically to address Jew-hatred. Its founding came at a pivotal moment — the years following the 2016 presidential election in the United States had seen a sharp and documented spike in antisemitic harassment, vandalism, and violence, a trend mirrored in Europe and elsewhere.
CAM operates at the intersection of advocacy, education, and technology, working with governments, tech companies, schools, and faith institutions to root out antisemitism wherever it takes hold. The organization has been a consistent voice urging social media platforms to enforce their own hate-speech policies against explicitly antisemitic content, and it has spearheaded public campaigns promoting the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) working definition of antisemitism as an international standard. The "Report It" app is the technological embodiment of CAM's grassroots strategy: empowering ordinary citizens to become active participants in documenting and halting the spread of hatred in their communities.
How the Report It App Works
The Report It app allows any user who witnesses or experiences an antisemitic incident — whether a verbal slur, physical assault, vandalism, online harassment, or institutionalized discrimination — to file a detailed, time-stamped report instantly from their mobile device. Critically, all reports can be submitted anonymously, lowering the barrier for victims and bystanders who may fear retaliation, social stigma, or bureaucratic complexity. The app captures essential data: the nature of the incident, its location, the time, and any additional context the reporter can provide, building a granular, real-time dataset of antisemitic activity across regions and communities.
This data is then aggregated and analyzed by CAM researchers and shared with law enforcement agencies, policymakers, and civil society organizations, creating an evidence base that can be used to identify patterns, allocate resources, and demand accountability from institutions that fail to act. The platform addresses one of the most persistent problems in tracking hate crimes: systemic underreporting. According to the Anti-Defamation League's Audit of Antisemitic Incidents, reported figures almost certainly undercount actual occurrences because many victims either do not know where to report incidents or distrust the reporting process. CAM's anonymous, streamlined app is designed explicitly to close that gap.
Key Facts: Antisemitism and the Reporting Crisis
- The ADL recorded over 8,870 antisemitic incidents in the United States in 2023 — the highest number since it began tracking in 1979 — representing a 140% increase compared to the previous year, driven in large part by the aftermath of the October 7 Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel.
- The European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) has consistently found that the vast majority of European Jews who experience antisemitic harassment do not report it to police or any official body, with underreporting rates exceeding 75% in multiple member states.
- CAM's Report It app enables anonymous, real-time submission across mobile platforms, integrating geolocation data and incident categorization to help researchers and authorities identify antisemitic hotspots and track emerging patterns of coordinated hate campaigns.
Analysis: Technology as a Weapon Against Hatred
The deployment of a dedicated reporting app reflects a sophisticated understanding of the modern antisemitism landscape. Hate today is not confined to fringe pamphlets or back-alley graffiti; it floods social media feeds, university campuses, political rallies, and corporate boardrooms. Traditional reporting mechanisms — police hotlines, government forms, institutional complaint desks — are slow, intimidating, and poorly calibrated to capture the velocity and volume of contemporary antisemitic expression. CAM's app meets the problem where it lives: on the smartphones of ordinary people who witness incidents but previously had no effective, private channel through which to document them. Critically, the aggregated data produced by the app arms advocacy organizations and governments with the empirical evidence needed to push back against the persistent denial that antisemitism is a serious, structural problem in Western societies. As the Combat Antisemitism Movement has repeatedly demonstrated, the fight against Jew-hatred requires not just moral condemnation but hard data — and real-time reporting tools are central to that evidentiary strategy.
The timing of CAM's push for widespread adoption of the Report It app is significant. The period since October 7, 2023 has witnessed an explosion of antisemitic incidents on college campuses, in city streets, and across digital platforms, much of it thinly veiled behind the language of anti-Zionism. Encampments at elite universities featured explicit calls for violence against Israelis and Jews; synagogues and Jewish community centers have faced bomb threats and vandalism at alarming frequency; and online platforms have struggled — often failing — to moderate coordinated antisemitic harassment campaigns. In this climate, a tool that enables rapid, anonymous documentation of incidents is not a mere convenience but an act of communal defense.
Significance: Empowering Communities, Building Accountability
The broader significance of CAM's Report It app lies in what it represents philosophically and strategically. Antisemitism thrives in silence — in the unrecorded slur, the undocumented act of vandalism, the harassment that a victim feels powerless to report. Every incident that goes undocumented is an incident that never enters the historical record, never informs policy, never triggers accountability. By building a tool that removes the friction from reporting and protects the privacy of those who come forward, CAM is attacking the structural silence that has historically allowed antisemitism to fester and escalate unchecked.
The app also signals a maturing of the global Jewish civil society response to hatred: one that complements traditional advocacy and education with technological innovation. In a democratic society, accountability depends on evidence, and evidence depends on documentation. The more comprehensively antisemitic incidents are recorded, verified, and analyzed, the harder it becomes for institutions — governments, universities, corporations, and social media platforms — to look the other way. CAM's initiative mirrors the broader principle that the IHRA working definition of antisemitism advanced at the international level: that confronting Jew-hatred requires clear definitions, consistent standards, and, above all, the political will to act on documented reality. The Report It app is a practical instrument of that democratic accountability, turning every witness into a guardian of the historical record and a participant in the collective defense of Jewish life.
