Sweden's municipalities and government are directly and indirectly funding anti-Semitic organizations, according to a research conducted by Gatestone Institute for International Relations.

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The research was published by Nima Gholam Ali Pour, a member of the board of education in the Swedish city of Malmö, as well as a participant of several Swedish Middle East teams.

Swastikas on synagogues in Sweden

In addition, he is the editor for the social conservative website "Situation Malmö," and has published books.

The research report also concluded that Malmö's municipality is using tax payers' money to endorse Group 194—an organization that posts anti-Semitic content on its Facebook page, such as a caricature of a Jew drinking blood and feeding on a child.

The research argued that anti-Semitism originating in the Middle East is also funded by Swedish public money.

Therefore, when anti-Semitic scandals occur in the Scandinavian country, those tasked with addressing them are often the same officials responsible for distributing the offensive material that led to them.

Moreover, no effective action is currently being taken against the spread of anti-Semitism in Sweden.

Ali Pour concluded that the direct and indirect governmental funding of anti-Semitic organization should be scrutinized and immediately halted.

Stockholm Neo-Nazi rally (Photo: EPA)

He adds that as long as the funding continues, Sweden's Jews will continue living in a perpetual state of fear and insecurity.

Big Swedish cities such as Malmö have become known as places in which Jews feel threatened, and the country's increasingly prevalent anti-Semitism has drawn international attention.

In December of 2017, Muslims demonstrated in front of a synagogue in Malmö and a Molotov cocktail was thrown at a prayer room in a Jewish cemetery following US President Donald Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

"We want our freedom back and we'll shoot the Jews," the anti-Semitic demonstrators shouted in front of the synagogue.

Molotov cocktails were also hurled at a synagogue in the Swedish city of Gothenburg.

Hate graffiti on synagogues

Furthermore, representatives of the Youth Against Settlements (YAS) organization based in Hebron are visiting and lecturing in Swedish high schools against Hebron's Jewish residents.

One of the high school students who attended YAS's lectures in February 2018 said that the anti-Semitic organization had argued that there are checkpoints all across Israel and that Arabs are routinely beaten and killed.

It was also said the Palestinians are living in concentration camps similar to those set up by the Nazis in in WWII.

"They talked a lot of nonsense and made us to take pictures with their flag," one of the high school student said.

"The most controversial thing they said was that the Jews control the United States and the media," another student added.

Zelika El Motsev and Anas Amro, YAS's representatives across Sweden, were described in the media as "peace activists," while they praised stabbing attacks, Shahids (martyrs) and Arab uprising on their Facebook pages.

YAS's spokespersons were invited to speak before public institutions in Sweden and the country's Foreign Affairs Minister Margot Wallström met with them during her visit to Ramallah in December 2016.