“This feels like the closest thing to the type of anti-Semitism that my grandparents talk about experiencing in Poland.”

That's 24-year-old Morriah Kaplan, talking about her experience of coming to terms with the anti-Semitism in America that Donald Trump's candidacy has breathed new life into. Several stories of late have touched on the topic of Jewish millennials coming to terms with the fact that anti-Semitism is clearly alive and well after a short lifetime of thinking it was a dying phenomenon.

The New York Times has a piece penned by Brown University junior Benjamin Gladstone in which he discusses being ostracized by his peers because of his "leadership roles in campus Jewish organizations" and notes his fellow students have little-to-no appetite for engaging anti-Semitism in American culture as a legitimate cause.

Even as they rightfully protest hate crimes against Muslim Americans and discrimination against black people, they wrongfully dismiss attacks on Jews (who are the most frequent targets of religiously motivated hate crimes in the United States) and increasing anti-Semitism in the American political arena, as can be seen in Donald Trump’s flirtations with the “ alt-right .” They don’t take issue with calls for the destruction of the world’s only Jewish state.

And then there are millennial Jews themselves waking up to the discrimination and hatred they had mostly relegated to the historical confines of a bygone era. Politico reports: