cnxps.cmd.push(function () { cnxps({ playerId: '36af7c51-0caf-4741-9824-2c941fc6c17b' }).render('4c4d856e0e6f4e3d808bbc1715e132f6'); });

Well-known Israeli television journalists Dafna Liel and Amalya Dwek were shaken on Wednesday evening, when a cab driver in Brussels launched into a profanity-laden tirade, calling them “dirty Jews” and other anti-Semitic slurs.Just over a week after Chief Rabbi of Brussels Avraham Gigi made controversial remarks about the lack of a future for Jews in the small western European nation, the pair, alongside an unidentified third woman, boarded a cab in the Belgian capital and were immediately asked if they were Israeli.“We were frightened. He started to curse us for a couple of minutes,” before demanding three times the normal rate for the trip, Liel told The Jerusalem Post by phone from Brussels on Thursday.“I was so scared, I said ‘Okay, we will pay you,’ and I really felt that he might attack us.He looked so angry, he had this crazy look,” she recalled.The anti-Semitic incidents did not stop there.Later Wednesday evening, one of Liel’s traveling companions was approached by a man at a bar who asked her where she was from and angrily told her that he refused to sit anywhere near an Israeli.Several Palestinians in the mixed Jewish-Arab group visiting Brussels have also complained of what they characterized as “anti-Muslim hate” and a “tense atmosphere.”“We are only here for four days. Actually, before it happened, I didn’t think anything like this could happen,” Liel added. She noted that a religious member of their group stopped wearing his kippa in public after the cab incident.“Until you meet it, you don’t imagine. We have all been around to Europe [but] you don’t think it exists until it hits [you] in the face. I can’t tell you [what I think about the future of European Jewry] because I don’t live here, but we’ve had two incidents in four days and we are a small group. It’s not a good feeling.”A third of Jews polled in a number of EU countries refrained from wearing religious garb or Jewish symbols out of fear, and 23% avoided attending Jewish events or going to Jewish venues, a 2013 study released by the EU’s Agency for Fundamental Rights reported.While 66% of those polled reported anti-Semitism as negatively impacting their lives, 77% did not bother reporting abuse or harassment.