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        <identifier>oai:gjd:source-6.en</identifier>
        <datestamp>2025-05-08T00:00:00Z</datestamp>
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                <dc:language>en</dc:language>
                <dc:title>AJR Information Vol. XV No. 5, May, 1960</dc:title>
                <dc:identifier>https://diaspora.jewish-history-online.net/source/gjd:source-6</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>AJR Journal, the journal of the Association of Jewish Refugees (AJR),
is the best and richest source of post-1945 information about the
community of Jewish refugees from Nazism who fled to Britain after
1933. It commenced publication in January 1946 as AJR Information and
has appeared every month since. In 2000, it was renamed AJR Journal.
The AJR was founded in London in 1941 to represent the Jewish refugees
from the German-speaking lands, over 70,000 of whom had fled to
Britain after 1933. Its journal was intended to function as a means of
contact with its membership, to provide essential information to the
community it represented and to act as a forum for debate on issues of
interest and concern to its readers. It aimed to preserve the cultural
heritage of German-speaking Jewry in the refugees’ new homeland; but
it also sought to ease the process of the integration of refugees into
British society, though without abandoning the German-Jewish identity
that the refugees had brought with them.

The issue of May 1960 can serve as an example of the journal’s
methods and achievements. It begins with an impassioned leading
article by the German-born historian and sociologist Eva G. Reichmann
(1897–1998), formerly one of the leading ideologists of the
Centralverein deutscher Staatsbürger jüdischen Glaubens (CV) and
subsequently director of research at the Wiener Library in London. It
launches into an analysis of recent German history, from the First
World War to Nazism and its continuing malign legacy of antisemitism
in the Federal Republic.

Reichmann’s article is followed by a page each on events in Britain,
Germany and Austria and in the wider world (pages 3-5). The wide range
of articles on matters of historical and cultural interest to the
German-speaking Jewish refugees is evident from pages 6, 8, 10 and 15.
Page 7 is devoted to the important question of restitution, while page
9 contains ‘Anglo-Judaica’, the regular column on news about
British Jewry. Pages 11 and 12 demonstrate the journal’s
determination to celebrate the notable achievements of German-speaking
Jews, especially in the cultural field; the column ‘Old
Acquaintances’ on page 11 draws on the prodigiously detailed
knowledge of the writer and journalist Paul Marcus (1901–1972, PEM),
who had fled Nazi Germany in 1933. Pages 13 and 14 provide readers
with organisational information about the AJR and its activities,
while advertisements predominate on pages 15 and 16.</dc:description>
                <dc:date>2025-05-08</dc:date>
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