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        <datestamp>2026-04-08T00:00:00Z</datestamp>
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                <dc:title>„Hausfrauen aus aller Welt treffen sich im ‚Aufbau‘“, in: Aufbau, January 25, 1957, p. 13</dc:title>
                <dc:identifier>https://diaspora.jewish-history-online.net/source/gjd:source-18</dc:identifier>
                <dc:creator/>
                <dc:publisher>Moses Mendelssohn Center for European-Jewish Studies</dc:publisher>
                <dc:subject/>
                <dc:type>Online Ressource</dc:type>
                <dc:description>“Housewives from around the world meet each other in the Aufbau,”
declared the headline in the paper’s January 25, 1957, edition. It
published four recipes by women residing in different places who
shared their favorite dishes for the benefit of Aufbau readers, just
like themselves. Tucked in page 13 and covering a humble spot on the
top right corner of the page, this was clearly not a major media
event. The paper’s opening pages delivered the urgent news of the
hour, from the aftermath of the Suez Crisis in the Middle East to the
state of Soviet suppression in Hungary. Interspersed among those were
reports and essays that reflected the interests of the core
readership, for example: updates from Jewish communities across
Europe, a eulogy for the recently deceased Italian-American conductor,
Arturo Toscanini (1867–1957), and news of the latest winner of the
Peace Prize of the German Book Trade. While seemingly of lesser
consequence, the short feature on page 13 that addressed “housewives
from around the world” is equally revealing of the Aufbau’s
history, its function, and its meaning as one of the most important
publications of the German-Jewish diaspora.

The flight of German-speaking Jews during the years of Nazi terror and
their dispersion throughout the world saw the emergence of multiple
regional newspapers and press organs that catered to the readership of
Central European refugees. The Aufbau, which was published in New
York, was for many decades the most widely circulated and influential
of these papers. Like the British AJR Information or the
Mitteilungsblatt published in Palestine/Israel, the Aufbau was created
as the communications organ of a community organization, the
German-Jewish Club. When this organization was founded in 1924 in New
York, it served as a type of landsmanshaft with a membership of
several hundred Jews of Central European, primarily German origin.
With the influx of Jews fleeing Central Europe in 1933 and onwards,
the German-Jewish Club quickly expanded into a self-help society that
catered to the various needs of this growing refugee population, and
was renamed the New World Club in 1940.

The very first edition of Aufbau was published on December 1, 1934,
and very much bore the character of a community newsletter. It was
initially published monthly, printed with a circulation of about 500
copies that were distributed to members of the German-Jewish Club.
Within a few years, the emergence of a large German-Jewish population
in the United States (numbering between 120,000 and 150,000 people)
and the circumstances under which it came into existence transformed
this newsletter into an esteemed weekly publication with a wide
readership and an impressive circulation. At its peak, during the
1940s, the Aufbau had a circulation of about 45,000 copies every week.</dc:description>
                <dc:date>2026-04-08</dc:date>
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