Such questions are notoriously difficult to answer. Nonetheless, after extensive examination of several surveys of European opinions about Jews, Günther Jikeli has drawn some conclusions:
Anti-Semitic attitudes are significantly more widespread among Muslims than among [members of] other segments of European societies. What is more, the interpretation of Islam seems to be highly relevant. Anti-Semitic attitudes are particularly strong among believing and practicing Muslims and correlate with authoritarian, “fundamentalist” interpretations of Islam. . . .
Notably, demographic and socio-economic variables—that is, educational level, age, gender, social disadvantage, discrimination, and legal restrictions of Islamic practice—cannot explain the differences between Muslims and non-Muslims. This refutes the widespread assumption that Muslim anti-Semitism is a reaction to discrimination or suppression.
Read more at Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy
More about: Anti-Semitism, European Islam, European Jewry, Jewish World, Muslim-Jewish relations