Jewish Community of Berlin
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Jewish Community of Berlin
Summary
Jewish Community of Berlin is a qahal[1].
Key Facts
- Jewish Community of Berlin's field of work was Judaism[2].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's field of work was Jewish culture[3].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's field of work was religious education[4].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's field of work was welfare spending[5].
- Jewish Community of Berlin was a member of Kommunaler Arbeitgeberverband Berlin[6].
- Jewish Community of Berlin was a member of Cooperative Library Network Berlin-Brandenburg[7].
- Jewish Community of Berlin is located in Berlin[8].
- Jewish Community of Berlin is in the country of Germany[9].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's instance of is recorded as qahal[10].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's instance of is recorded as library[11].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's founder is recorded as Samuel Schulhoff[12].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's Commons category is recorded as Judaism in Berlin[13].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's chairperson is recorded as Gideon Joffe[14].
- Jewish Community of Berlin comprises Library of the Jewish Community of Berlin[15].
- Jewish Community of Berlin comprises Jewish high school Moses Mendelssohn[16].
- Jewish Community of Berlin comprises Weißensee Cemetery[17].
- 1671 marks the founding of Jewish Community of Berlin[18].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 52.524917, 'longitude': 13.394642, 'precision': 1e-06}[19].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's official website is recorded as http://www.jg-berlin.org[20].
- Jewish Community of Berlin's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Jews and Judaism in Berlin[21].
Body
Founding
Jewish Community of Berlin's founder is recorded as Samuel Schulhoff[12]. 1671 marks the founding of it[18].
Leadership
Jewish Community of Berlin's chairperson is recorded as Gideon Joffe[14].
Industry
Fields of work include Judaism[2], a religion[22], founded in -0500[23]; Jewish culture[3], a culture by ethnic group[24]; religious education[4], a field of study[25], written by Richard Dehmel[26]; and welfare spending[5], a social services[27].