(IRGZ), inaugurated in 1924 Starting in 1920, the city of Zurich had special citizenship regulations that discriminated against Jews from Eastern Europe. These rules were dropped in 1936. In 1920, the proportion of the Jewish population was 1.3%. The Jews who came to Zurich in the first quarter of the 20th century were often self-employed, working as clothing and linen manufacturers, lawyers, doctors, or tradesmen. In 1924, a local synagogue was vandalised with a number of swastikas engraved on the walls. During
World War II, most of the Jews who had fled to Switzerland came to Zurich and were granted the right of residence there from 1940 to 1943. With many Jews seeking refuge in Switzerland, funds were raised, not by Swiss authorities, but by the SIG (Israelite Community of Switzerland). The central committee for refugee aid, created in 1933, was located in Zurich. As Switzerland was a neutral zone, 1929 and 1937 saw Zurich host the
World Zionist Congress, the first of which took place in
1897 in Basel, organized by the journalist
Theodor Herzl. In 1945, Zurich's Jewish population numbered about 10,500, but it declined again from 1948 onward. Since 1970, the Jewish population in Zurich has remained more or less constant at around one percent. The library of the Jewish Community of Zurich, which was opened in 1939, was declared a Swiss National Cultural Property in 2009, as it is considered the most important Judaica library in the German-speaking world. In 2005, Zurich had four Jewish congregationsthe moderately Orthodox
Israelitische Cultusgemeinde (ICZ); the Orthodox Israelitische Religionsgesellschaft (IRG); Agudas Achim (275 families and singles), which follows the East European tradition; and the egalitarian Liberal Jewish congregation Or Chadasch (est. in 1978)each possessing its own religious institutions (e.g. four different Jewish cemeteries) and officials. The
canton of Zurich did not recognize the Jewish religious communities as legal entities (and therefore as equal to national churches) until 2005. The Jewish liberal community of Zurich, Or Chadasch, was founded in 1978 and recognized by the state in 2007. At the end of 2020, the first seven
Stolpersteine were laid in Zurich to commemorate victims of the
Nazi regime. As of 2021, around 5000 Jews live in District 2 and District 3, with another thousand living in the rest of the city. The Jewish population consists mainly of
Ashkenazim. Others include
Misrachim and
Sephardim. Zurich is home to representatives of
orthodox and
ultra-orthodox Judaism, as well as liberal and
secular Judaism. In March 2024, a 50-year-old Orthodox Jewish man was stabbed and critically injured in Zurich. The attack was allegedly carried out by a 15-year-old Swiss national of Tunisian descent who had pledged allegiance to the
Islamic State and called for a “battle against the Jews". Swiss President
Viola Amherd expressed shock over the attack and emphasized that "antisemitism has no place in Switzerland". == See also ==