Western European Jews are not religious on the whole. But they remain a people.
Christians believed that a Jewish man “made the world” (The [Greek] Gospel According to John, Chapter 1), and worshipped him as one-third of their God. Jews scorned and rejected the idea of a man-god in the years of the Roman Empire, and continued to hold their Law sacred and to worship their abstract God. The Romans seized their country and dispersed the population.
Their continuing difference of belief annoys Christians and Muslims. Their obstinate survival, and eventually, in the twentieth century, the recovery of their land from the Turkish Empire after thousands of years of persecution, are sources of hatred and contempt.
They were granted their ancient land as a “homeland” by victorious Britain after the Turks were defeated in World War One. But when the urgent need arose for German and other European Jews to find a safe haven, they were refused entry to their “homeland”. It was only years later, after millions were killed by the Nazis during World War Two in what the Jews name the Holocaust, and the Nazi regime in Germany was defeated by the Western allies, that a surviving part of the Jewish nation was allowed to declare their homeland a state. It was the first and only independent state on that piece of land since the Jews’ defeat by the Roman Emperors.
Britain’s native Christian - but mainly irreligious - population is now culturally redefined by immigrant Muslims, and has become intensely antisemitic in many (most? all?) of its public institutions.
From the linked article:
It is difficult to know where the monumental ignorance of the BBC ends and their wilful revision of history begins. This is yet further evidence of an institutionalised hatred of Jews that permeates the BBC’s reporting.