German Jewish magazine to hide publication’s name in deliveries

Jewish Berlin will send the monthly to subscribers in blank envelopes as a response to recent anti-Semitic attacks across Europe.

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(JTA) — A monthly Jewish magazine in Germany said it will deliver copies to subscribers in blank envelopes as a response to recent anti-Semitic attacks across Europe.

Judisches Berlin, or Jewish Berlin, is taking the measure to hide the publication’s name.

“We decided to do so despite the significant additional costs to reduce the likelihood of hostility towards our more than 10,000 community members,” the magazine’s spokesman told Berlin’s Tagesspiegel newspaper.

The Guardian reported that in a foreword to the latest issue of Jewish Berlin, Gideon Joffe, board chairman of the Jewish Community of Berlin, Germany’s largest Jewish communal organization, wrote, “Israelis are beaten up in Berlin solely on the grounds that they are Israeli Jews. We are not yet – I repeat yet – at the stage where Jews are being murdered in Germany just because they are Jews. But measures have to be taken to protect the democratic rule of law.”

Germany is home to nearly 200,000 Jews, and the number of Israelis migrating to Germany has increased in recent years. Earlier this year, a Jewish man was beaten in a Berlin train station after he asked a group of men to stop singing anti-Semitic songs.

After the recent attack on a Copenhagen synagogue, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that Germany will do everything in its power to keep the country’s Jewish community safe.

Jewish Berlin, which features articles on Jewish life in Germany, was first published in 1998 and is issued 10 months of the year.

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