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The store of David Kempler with the inscription “Krakow café and pastry store, breakfast, dinner table”

A café on Grenadierstraße, the central street of Yiddish-speaking Berlin in the 1920s. Jewish Museum Berlin, Gift of Hillel Kempler

Yiddish & Jewish Identity: Journey of a Language in Germany

Public Tour with Jake Schneider

Yiddish holds a special place in Germany’s heritage. As one of many diasporic Jewish languages, Yiddish emerged over a thousand years ago in the German-speaking regions of Europe. It served as the everyday language of Ashkenazi Jews, who brought it along as they migrated. Yet Yiddish has never entirely left Germany.

Sat 25 Oct 2025, 3 pm

Map with all buildings that belong to the Jewish Museum Berlin. The Old Building is marked in green

Where

Old Building, ground level, “Meeting Point” in the foyer
Lindenstraße 9–14, 10969 Berlin

Jews’ changing role in society since the Enlightenment led many speakers to switch to German. But in the 1880s, a wave of Yiddish-speaking immigrants brought a newly confident culture to Germany. Yiddish was becoming a vehicle of literature, theater, politics, song – and Jewish identity.

More than 5 million Yiddish speakers were murdered in the Holocaust, but islands of living Yiddish survived. And recently, a community of Yiddish-speaking artists, scholars, and activists has emerged in Berlin – including the tour guide.

This tour explores the overlooked role Yiddish has played for Jews in Germany and reflects on how languages play into our own family’s story and sense of self.

Where, when, what?

  • WhenSat 25 Oct 2025, 3 pm
  • Where Old Building, ground level, “Meeting Point” in the foyer
    Lindenstraße 9–14, 10969 Berlin
    See location on map
  • Entry fee

    Tour 6 €, reduced rate 3 €, plus museum ticket
    Reserve Online Ticket

  • Please notePlease obtain an additional museum ticket at the museum ticket office at the entrance on the day of the tour. This is free of charge for the core exhibition.

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