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        <identifier>oai:jgo:source-200.en</identifier>
        <datestamp>2019-07-09T00:00:00Z</datestamp>
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                <dc:language>en</dc:language>
                <dc:title>The Synagogue on Bibliotheksgata – Saved from the “Kristallnacht”, in: Dagens Nyheter, November 10, 1958, p. 12</dc:title>
                <dc:identifier>https://dx.doi.org/10.23691/jgo:source-200.en.v1</dc:identifier>
                <dc:creator>N. N.</dc:creator>
                <dc:publisher>Institute for the History of the German Jews</dc:publisher>
                <dc:subject/>
                <dc:type>Online Ressource</dc:type>
                <dc:description>This article, written by an anonymous journalist for the Swedish daily
newspaper Dagens Nyheter (Daily News), was published on the 20th
commemoration of the November Pogroms on November 10, 1958. It is now
located in the digital archive of Kungliga Biblioteket (The National
Library of Sweden). Under the headline “Synagoga på Biblioteksgatan
räddad från ‘Kristallnatten’” (“Synagogue on Library Street
saved from ‘the Kristalnacht’”), the article explains the
journey of the former Heinrich Barth Straße synagogue in Hamburg to
Stockholm in 1939, and its consecutive transformation into the
orthodox synagogue Adat Jeshurun.

The article describes not only the transnational movement of the
furniture of a sacred place, but also explains the synagogue’s role
in Stockholm as a space for surviving Shoah victims, forcefully
removed from their homes and for shorter or longer periods living in
the Swedish capital. Adat Jeshurun, still existent today, is therefore
not only a story about the odyssey of a sacred place from Hamburg to
Stockholm, but also portrays the relocation of Shoah survivors in the
post-Second World War world, and the consequential reestablishment of
the religious rituals they had learnt in their former hometowns.</dc:description>
                <dc:date>2019-07-09</dc:date>
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