Landmark study finds 1.3 million people who describe themselves as Jewish in continental Europe, UK, Turkey and Russia, down 60% since 1970

An extravagant new building has quadrupled one congregation's visitors, but many of the wealthy principality's 2,000 Jews feel just as comfortable in the more modest Chabad house

After years of building the infrastructure to be self-reliant, many smaller Jewish centers again require outside support -- but are confident they have the tools to bounce back

Seven donors give cash to 13 institutions with 'dire' financial difficulties brought on by pandemic, as parents struggle to pay fees and regular donations dry up

Starting September 6, highly-secured Jewish communities to invite general public to classes, tours, and other programs for annual bridge-building European Days of Jewish Culture

Unlike the US, the European counterparts are more than ideological and geographic groups, and offer education and religious services for an annual fee; both models are evolving

Guides and caterers rethink their lives in Jewish hospitality as the COVID-19 crisis pushes them towards poverty

In 'House of Glass,' The Guardian's Hadley Freeman writes a family memoir about her search to explain why her paternal grandmother survived, but didn't thrive after the Holocaust

Andras Koerner, author of Jewish Book Award-winning 'Jewish Cuisine in Hungary,' uses untouched culinary traditions to explore centuries of cultural history before the Holocaust

With borders closed around the continent due to the virus outbreak and Passover around the corner, Jews who once relied on larger population centers must now fend for themselves

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