Bogårdsvägen 17, 128 62 Sköndal
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Site
Bogårdsvägen 17, 128 62 Sköndal
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Linvävarvägen, 171 64 Solna
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Kronobergsgatan 2, 112 38 Stockholm
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Alströmergatan 47, 112 47 Stockholm
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Wahrendorffsgatan 3B, 111 47 Stockholm
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Östra Larmgatan 12, 411 07 Göteborg, Suède +46 31 10 94 00 jf@jfgbg.se judiskaforsamlingen.se
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Rörsjöstaden, Malmö Tel : +46 40 611 84 60 Judiska Församlingen Malmö (jfm.se)
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Kamrergatan 11 – 211 56 Malmö +46 40-611 84 60
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S:t Paulsgatan 13, 118 46 Stockholm +46 8644 19 95 Adat jisrael – startsida –
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Wahrendorffsgatan 3, Stockholm 111 47, Suède +46 8 587 858 00 For English speakers (jfst.se)
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Själagårdsgatan 19, Stockholm
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Själagårdsgatan 19, 111 31 Stockholm Telephone: +46 8 30 15 00 Judiska museet | Judiska museet i Stockholm
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Nybrogatan 19, 114139 Stockholm +46 8587 858 00
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Jews have lived in Göteborg since 1782. The Conservative (masorti) rite synagogue is located at the same address as the community center. There is also an Orthodox minyan in Göteborg. Before settling in the city of Gothenburg in 1792, Jews were welcomed along with other minorities to the nearby island of Marstrand. Although the first synagogue was built in 1808, the presence of a rabbi did ...
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Danish Jews evacuated during the Nazi occupation arrived by boat in Malmö thanks to Count Folke Bernadotte. Some Jews died after their arrival and are buried in the city cemetery, where a monument honors their memory. A Jewish community (originally made up of German Jews) was established in this city on the Baltic coast facing Copenhagen in 1871, shortly after the emancipation. It now numbers ...
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Scandinavia has not always been divided along its current national borders. When King Christian IV (1588-1648) opened Denmark to the Jews, the country included not only southern Sweden and several cities in northern Germany (Schleswig-Holstein), where the majority of Danish Jews lived, but also a part of the Virgin Islands in the Antilles, where Danish Jews had a central role. In contrast, ...
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