DEUTSCH-ISRAELITISCHER GEMEINDEBUND

DEUTSCH-ISRAELITISCHER GEMEINDEBUND
DEUTSCH-ISRAELITISCHER GEMEINDEBUND (DIGB), union of German Jewish communities; the first all-German Jewish association. Founded in 1869 at the Leipzig synod , the DIGB began its activities only with the establishment of the German Empire (1871). Initially its headquarters were in Leipzig, but in 1882 they were moved to Berlin. The union gradually embraced most of the German communities, but internal dissensions and legal obstacles prevented it from becoming the representative body of German Jewry. Many of the Orthodox communities withheld their cooperation even though the DIGB's constitution precluded it from dealing with religious and political issues. After World War I, when the Weimar Republic permitted the unification of religious associations, a fresh attempt at effecting a joint representation of all communities had no practical results. Instead, separate communal associations were established in the different states, the largest of which was the Preussischer Landesverband der juedischen Gemeinden. A fully representative body, the reichsvertretung der deutschen juden , was established only in 1933, as a result of the pressures of the Nazi regime. The DIGB's activities were widespread. In particular it adopted small and financially weak communities, supporting the appointment of religious teachers, providing grants for communal buildings, planning curricula, and organizing Jewish teachers' conferences. One outcome of these efforts was the creation of the Jewish Teachers' Association of the German Empire. Funds were set up to provide for communal officials and charitable institutions, including homes for neglected and mentally retarded children, and a Jewish Workers' Colony for the rehabilitation of impoverished immigrants. In 1885 the DIGB founded the Historical Commission for Investigating the History of the Jews in Germany to gather and sift sources and records for scientific research into the Jewish past. The Commission included non-Jews, such as the legal historian otto stobbe , one of its first chairmen. Only three volumes of the Commission's Quellen zur Geschichte der Juden in Deutschland (1888–98) were published. Another important publication was the Zeitschrift fuer die Geschichte der Juden in Deutschland, edited by ludwig geiger and published for six years (1887–92). To cover German Jewry's more recent past the Gesamtarchiv der deutschen Juden (subsequently transferred to Israel; see jewish archives ) was set up, and a statistical yearbook was published. The DIGB attempted to combat antisemitism by disseminating explanatory literature, an activity later expanded by the centralverein deutscher staatsbuerger juedischen glaubens . Presidents of the DIGB included the renowned gynecologist S. Kristeller and the historian Martin Phillipson. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: A. Kober, in: JSOS, 9 (1947), 195–238; K. Wilhelm, in: YLBI, 2 (1957), 61–63; A. Sandler, ibid., 76–84. (Reuven Michael)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Deutsch-israelitischer Gemeindebund — Deutsch israelitischer Gemeindebund, s. Gemeindebund …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Gemeindebund, deutsch-israelitischer — Gemeindebund, deutsch israelitischer, eine freiwillige Vereinigung der jüdischen Korporationen Deutschlands zum Austausch von Erfahrungen im Verwaltungswesen, namentlich aber zur Hebung des sozialen, wissenschaftlichen und ethischen Lebens der… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • PHILANTHROPY — Introduction At the close of the 18th century the communal system of fund raising for charity with authority vested in the charity overseers (Gabba ei Ẓedakah) – to tax members of the community in order to ensure appropriate giving – was on the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • PHILIPPSON — PHILIPPSON, German Jewish family of prominent rabbis, scholars, educators, journalists, doctors, bankers, and scientists. Their family tree goes back to 16th century Poland, where joshua hoeschel ben joseph (c. 1578–1648) had been chief rabbi of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • NACHOD, JACOB — (1814–1882), merchant and second president of the deutsch israelitischer gemeindebund . An orphan, he studied at the Wolfenbuettel Samsonschule and went to Leipzig in 1830. There he founded in 1844 the Gesellschaft der Freunde, the forerunner of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Heinrich Graetz — (October 31, 1817 September 7, 1891) was amongst the first historians to write a comprehensive history of the Jewish people from a Jewish perspective.Born Tzvi Hirsh Graetz to a butcher family in Książ Wielkopolski (Poznań) in Germany (now in… …   Wikipedia

  • BERLIN — BERLIN, largest city and capital of Germany. The Old Community (1295–1573) Jews are first mentioned in a letter from the Berlin local council of Oct. 28, 1295, forbidding wool merchants to supply Jews with wool yarn. Suzerainty over the Jews… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Moritz Lazarus — This article is about the philosopher named Lazarus. For other uses of the name Lazarus, see Lazarus (name). Moritz Lazarus Moritz Lazarus …   Wikipedia

  • Graetz, Gesch. — Heinrich Graetz Heinrich Graetz Nom de naissance Tzvi Hirsh Graetz Naissance 31 octobre 1817 Décès …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Grätz, Gesch. — Heinrich Graetz Heinrich Graetz Nom de naissance Tzvi Hirsh Graetz Naissance 31 octobre 1817 Décès …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”