According to Finn Schwarz, president of the Jewish Community in Denmark, the religious organization had approximately 1900 members in 2013. Compared to 1997, this number indicates a significant decrease in membership, which the Jewish community has explained partly by increasing antisemitic incidents. Research from Danish professor Peter Nannestad has shown that antisemitism in Denmark is confined to minority groups and is not an issue in Danish society at large. Rather, the fact that Denmark has become increasingly secular in recent years might be a better explanation for why Jews and other groups with a strong religious heritage face difficulties in adapting to life in Denmark. Indeed, it has been suggested that non-Orthodox Jews have little or no problems feeling at home in Denmark. Almost all Jews are integrated into mainstream Danish society. Danish society has generally maintained a safe and friendly environment for its Jewish minority. There are three active synagogues in Denmark today, all in Copenhagen. The larger synagogue on
Krystalgade is a
Modern Orthodox-
Conservative community and inclusive of its members' affiliations, though it follows a traditional liturgy. The Machsike Hadas Synagogue is an
Orthodox synagogue, and
Chabad also has a presence in Copenhagen. Shir Hatzafon is a Reform Jewish synagogue and community in Denmark. In addition, two Jewish periodicals are published in Danish:
Rambam, published by Selskabet for Dansk-Jødisk Historie, and
Alef, a journal of Jewish culture.
Contemporary antisemitism As of 2012, tolerance toward the Jewish population in Denmark has become more tenuous due to increasing
anti-Zionist sentiment and
anti-Jewish hostility. In February 2014, the AKVAH (Section for Mapping and Sharing of Knowledge about
antisemitic Incidents) published its
Report on Antisemitic Incidents in Denmark 2013. The report described 43 antisemitic incidents that occurred in Denmark during the year, which included assault and physical harassment, threats, antisemitic utterances, and vandalism. According to the report, there was no change in the level of antisemitism in the country compared to previous years. The Jewish community in Denmark reported an increase in threatening messages and antisemitic assaults caused by the
2014 Israel–Gaza conflict. In August 2014, the "Carolineskolen", a Jewish school,
kindergarten and
daycare complex in Copenhagen, was vandalized as windows were smashed and antisemitic graffiti was sprayed on the school walls. The graffiti was political in nature and referred to the ongoing conflict between Israel and
Hamas in Gaza. Prior to this event, school officials advised parents not to allow their children to wear Jewish religious symbols in public as a result of rising reports of antisemitic harassment in Denmark. The Jewish community in Denmark reported 29 incidents in connection with the conflict in Gaza. In September 2014, a Danish
imam,
Mohamad Al-Khaled Samha, at a mosque run by
The Islamic Society in Denmark, said in a filmed lecture that the Jews are the "offspring of apes and pigs". In July 2014 Al-Khaled had stated "Oh Allah, destroy the
Zionist Jews. They are no challenge for you. Count them and kill them to the very last one. Don't spare a single one of them." On 15 February 2015,
a shooting occurred outside the
main synagogue in Copenhagen, and killed a Jewish man (who had been providing security during a
bat mitzvah) and injured two police officers. Prime Minister
Helle Thorning-Schmidt laid flowers at the synagogue, and stated "Our thoughts go to the whole of the Jewish community today. They belong in Denmark, they are a strong part of our community. And we will do everything we can to protect the Jewish community in our country." The synagogue's Rabbi, Jair Melchior, stated, "Terror is not a reason to move to Israel... Hopefully the [police] should do what they do, but our lives have to continue naturally. Terror's goal is to change our lives and we won't let it...We lost a dear member of the community and now we have to continue doing what he did, which was helping to continue regular Jewish lives in Denmark. This is the real answer to [this] vicious, cruel and cowardly act of terror." Two months later, a window at a local Kosher-food store was smashed and an anti-Semitic graffiti was scrawled on a wall. A review study published in 2015 by the
Institute for the Study of Global Antisemitism and Policy revealed that in a survey conducted in
Denmark, the number of antisemitic stereotypes among immigrants of Turkish, Pakistani, Somali, Palestinian and (former) Yugoslav origin were significantly more common (up to 75 percent) than among ethnic Danes (up to 20 percent). The survey, managed by the Institute for Political Science at
Aarhus University, consisted of interviews with 1,503 immigrants and 300 ethnic Danes. In the
Kundby case a Danish teenager became an enthusiast admirer of
ISIS,
Islamism, and
Jihad, converted to Islam, and was convicted of acquiring bomb-making materials for her plan to blow up a Jewish school in Copenhagen. In September 2017, soldiers from the
Royal Danish Army were deployed to guard synagogues in Copenhagen to relieve the
Police of Denmark, which was increasingly occupied with gang-related shootings in the city. In February 2024,
The Associated Press reported that the number of antisemitic incidents in Denmark "reached levels not seen since World War II," according to Henri Goldstein, the leader of the country's Jewish community; Goldstein cited reactions to the
Gaza war as the cause of this growing antisemitism. According to a report published by the
Danish Jewish Community’s Department for Mapping and Registering Antisemitic Incidents in the beginning of May 2026, in 2025, 199 antisemitic incidents were registered in the country, 24 of which were against Jewish children and young people. The total is the second-highest figure since monitoring started in 2012. According to Rosen, chairperson of the Jewish Community, "Unfortunately, antisemitism in Denmark is not retreating. It has become normalised at an unprecedented level." == Jews in Greenland ==