Jewish Gallery Berlin
The Jewish Gallery Berlin was founded by the Central Welfare Office of the Jews in 1993 to provide a platform for Jewish artists from Eastern Europe who emigrated to Germany. Among the emigrants were many artists, they met, organized exhibitions and events, which eventually led to the opening of the gallery in Oranienburger Straße in Berlin-Mitte.
The gallery moved to Chodowieckistraße in Prenzlauer Berg and since 2016 it has provided a forum for meeting and exchange for the art studio "Omanut" with Dependance in Berlin-Tempelhof.
Odeum cinema (Spandau)
The "Odeum Lichtspiele" in Spandau was founded and operated by Jewish owners around 1920. The cinema was housed in a building of the hotel "Roter Adler" in the style of the post-founder period. The building had two dance halls, one of which was used for theater performances as early as 1888, hence the name "Neues Stadttheater". The cinema performances took place in the other hall. In the twenties the cinema was called "Ufa-Lichtspiele" and towards the end "Odeum-Lichtspiele" until the fifties. In 1952 the name was changed again to "Odeon-Filmtheater".
Spitz Magazine (Berlin)
The Spitz Magazine was founded by Tal Alon, Israeli journalist living in Berlin, in 2012.
The magazine is mainly aimed at Israelis living in Berlin and tries to build a bridge to Germany. The magazine is not only, but in the first place practical guide to the German language, culture, social codes as well as political contexts.Cross Street Synagogue
Salon of Rahel Varnhagen (Berlin)
Rahel Varnhagen, born Levin, was a German-Jüdish writer and salonnière. She was committed to Jüdian emancipation and to the emancipation of women. In Berlin in the years 1790-1806 she ran a salon under the name „Salon of Rahel Levin“. Later, after her marriage she called it „Salon of Rahel Varnhagen“. The salon evenings took place in her apartment in Berlin's Maurerstra;e, where she invited poets, naturalists, politicians, socialites, and aristocrats from the elite of society to join her.
Landwerk Neuendorf im Sande (Steinhöfel)
In the Landwerk Neuendorf im Sande, to which about 375 hectares of land belonged, lived and worked young people and adults between 16 and 40 years, including some families with their young children. Exact figures are not known for the individual years.
German-Jewish Theater (Berlin)
The German-Jewish Theater is located since 1994 in the building of the Citizens' Office in Charlottenburg/Wilmersdorf. The German-Jewish Theater continues the idealistic work of the former Jewish theater "Bimah" in the Meinekestraße, after the last one was on the verge of closing.
The team of the German-Jewish Theater, which consists of participants from different cultures, has the goal to contribute to an intercultural exchange in the city and to develop a Christian-Jewish dialogue.
Jewish Cemetery Wandsbek (Hamburg)
The Jewish cemetery Wandsbeck or also cemetery Königsreihe in Hamburg was from 1637 to 1884 in use of the Jewish community Wandsbek.
.It is located on the former Lange Reihe (today Königsreihe, corner Litzowstraße) .
The tenant Colonel Bernd von Hagen provided the land on which the cemetery was built in 1634.
Like many Jewish cemeteries, this one was desecrated during the November pogrom of 1938.
Since 1960 the cemetery is under monument protection. Approximately 1,000 gravestones are still preserved, the oldest dating back to 1676.