Foreseeing darker days for German Jewry, Jewish leaders in this country have started a movement to concentrate the entire Jewish life of Germany in Berlin, it was revealed here today. The move is stimulated by the fact that Jews here are less subject to molestation than they are in the provinces.
The Israelitische Familienblatt, one of the oldest German Jewish newspapers, which has been published in Hamburg over a period of thirty-seven years, will move here, it was announced today.
“The insecurity of our existence is growing rapidly,” the Schild, official organ of the Jewish war veterans, writes today. “There is a wave of defamation that insults our honor when we think of our comrades, the dead and the living, together with whom we wore our field-gray robe of honor.”
STREICHER AGAIN
Julius Streicher, the notorious Jew-baiter who is known as anti-Semite No. 1 among the Nazi leaders, addressing a demonstration in Nuremberg today, announced that the German government “will go on to the very end” in the matter of settling the Jewish question.
“The Jews,” Herr Streicher said, “are living in Germany at their own risk. I believe that one day other countries will also follow the example of Germany with regard to the Jews. The world does not like our anti-Jewish propaganda. Our government was asked to prohibit Der Stuermer and its anti-Jewish propaganda. But Der Stuermer was not prohibited, because the Jewish question must be finally settled. The Jews must be recognized by the whole world as the misfortune of mankind.”
ARITISAN SIGNS FOR “ARYANS”
The Reich Organization for German Artisanship has just issued instructions that artisan signs are to be issued by the Artisan Chambers in Germany to “Aryans” only, in order to distinguish them from {SPAN}#ews{/SPAN}.
The fact that the lessee of the Town Hall of Wupperthal-Elberfeld let one of the rooms in the hall for a meeting of the Jewish Culture League of the Rhine-Ruhr district, has resulted in a decision
JTA has documented Jewish history in real-time for over a century. Keep our journalism strong by joining us in supporting independent, award-winning reporting.
The Archive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency includes articles published from 1923 to 2008. Archive stories reflect the journalistic standards and practices of the time they were published.