EPNA connects 170 members from 89 organisations in 23 European countries who lead the fight against antisemitism in Europe every day.

In 2025, the European Alliance Programme doubled to twenty projects, reflecting not only EPNA’s expanded capacity but also the accelerating demand from practitioners seeking resources and partnerships for transnational work. This growth indicates a maturing ecosystem where collaboration has moved from aspiration to operational reality. And the urgency driving our work has intensified considerably.

EPNA’s development trajectory suggests both accomplishment and remaining work. The network has established credibility as a platform where expertise is exchanged, partnerships are forged, and collective action is coordinated. It has demonstrated that practitioners across Europe’s diverse political and institutional landscapes can collaborate effectively despite differing contexts.

The challenge ahead is scaling our impact: expanding geographic reach beyond the network’s current Western and Central European focus; deepening engagement with Jewish communities whose participation remains essential; strengthening connections with governmental institutions while maintaining civil society autonomy; and building financial sustainability beyond short-term project funding. As antisemitism continues to evolve, so too must the structures designed to counter it.