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Home Jewish World Antisemitism

Fear forces Berlin Jews to hide their identity in community paper

Following surge in antisemitic incidents since October 7, community newspaper now publishes only first letters of birthday celebrants' surnames.

by  Nissan Shtrauchler
Published on  02-16-2025 08:00
Last modified: 02-16-2025 12:22
Fear forces Berlin Jews to hide their identity in community paperAP/Markus Schreiber

A man wears Jewish skullcap, as he attends a demonstration against an antisemitic attack in Berlin, on April 25, 2018 | Photo: AP/Markus Schreiber

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Growing security concerns have prompted the Jewish community in Berlin to implement a protective measure: publishing only the first letter of community members' surnames, rather than their full family names, in birthday announcements in the local community newspaper, according to a report in Bild. The community's monthly journal "Jewish Berlin" traditionally includes a section for "mazel tov" wishes to members over 65 and announcements of children's bar and bat mitzvah celebrations.

The publication recently added an explanatory note to the section: "Dear community members, in light of current anti-Israel and antisemitic incidents, we are now printing only birthday and bar/bat mitzvah names with abbreviated surnames as a precautionary security measure."

A Jewish-run shop bearing nazi antisemitic graffitis during the June 1938 antisemitic campaign (Photo: STR / FRANCE PRESSE VOIR / AFP) AFP

Speaking with Bild, Ilan Kiesling, spokesman for the Jewish community in Berlin, explained that this decision was implemented shortly after October 7, stemming from heightened security concerns for community members. Kiesling emphasized that this precautionary step aims to "minimize the potential for hostile actions against our community members," citing specific concerns about Hamas supporter demonstrations in Berlin's streets and the dramatic increase in antisemitic attacks following the October 7 massacre.

In a show of solidarity, Germans wearing kippot participated in a demonstration supporting the Jewish community in Berlin. Ahmed Mansour, an expert on radical Islam based in Germany, commented on the community's decision to withhold full names from public view, telling Bild: "An increasing number of Jews in this country fear being publicly identified as Jewish and subsequently attacked. This represents more than just a tragedy – it signifies a fundamental failure. A failure of our political system, our society, and those who claim that 'never again' amounts to more than empty rhetoric."

Tags: antisemtismBerlinDiasporaGermany

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