Jewish Community Schleswig-Holstein

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The Jewish Community of Schleswig-Holstein K.d.ö.R. is one of two advocacy groups for Jewish communities in Schleswig-Holstein . It includes the communities of Lübeck , Flensburg , Kiel and the region that follow the Orthodox movement .

history

The Association of Jewish Communities in Schleswig-Holstein and the Hanseatic Cities existed from 1912 to the time of National Socialism . After the Shoah , the Jewish Community of Schleswig-Holstein existed until it dissolved in 1968 due to a lack of members. As a result of the immigration of Jews from the former Soviet Union in the 1990s, Jewish life in Schleswig-Holstein as in Germany received new impulses. The Jewish Community of Schleswig-Holstein was founded in October 2004 as the second regional Jewish association in Schleswig-Holstein, alongside the regional association of the Jewish communities of Schleswig-Holstein , which had existed since 2002 and which represents the liberal tendency . Before the founding, local community centers of the Hamburg Jewish Community existed in Kiel and Flensburg , whose independent successor communities have now merged with the Lübeck Jewish Community.

On January 25, 2005, the state of Schleswig-Holstein signed the state treaty "on the promotion of Jewish life in Schleswig-Holstein" with both regional Jewish associations. The Jewish Community of Schleswig-Holstein has been a member of the Central Council of Jews in Germany since November 2005 . The association is a member of the Society for Christian-Jewish Cooperation Schleswig-Holstein eV

In 2013 the Jewish Community of Schleswig-Holstein had 1,260 members, according to the Central Welfare Office for Jews in Germany . Dov-Levy Barsilay has been the state rabbi of the Schleswig-Holstein Jewish Community since 2008, and Viktoria Ladyshenski is the managing director.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Jewish Community Schleswig-Holstein Kdö.R. from the website of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, accessed on August 2, 2014
  2. ^ Association of the Jewish Communities of Schleswig-Holstein and the Hanseatic Cities, on the website of the Institute for the History of German Jews, accessed on August 2, 2014
  3. ^ New Jewish communities in Elmshorn and Ahrensburg ( memento from September 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) on Talmud.de undated , accessed on August 2, 2014
  4. Stella Shcherbatova: Immigration and self-discovery: the Jewish communities in reunified Germany, Migration Policy Portal of the Heinrich Böll Foundation, November 18, 2013, accessed on August 2, 2014
  5. Barbara Goldberg: Einheitsgemeinde: Raum für Pluralismus, in: Jüdische Allgemeine from January 2, 2014, accessed on August 2, 2014
  6. ^ Treaty (...) on the promotion of Jewish life in Schleswig-Holstein. In: Federal Ministry of the Interior. Retrieved March 1, 2020 .
  7. ^ Chronicle, on the website of the Society CJZ Schleswig-Holstein, accessed on August 2, 2014
  8. ^ Regional associations, on the website of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, accessed on August 2, 2014
  9. http://www.ordonline.de/rabbiner/barsilay_dov-levy/
  10. ^ The importance of the State of Israel for Jews in Germany on the website of the Society CJZ Schleswig-Holstein, accessed on August 2, 2014
  11. Our regional associations on site. Central Council of Jews in Germany, accessed on March 1, 2020 .