Chancellor Angela Merkel said Germany was "glad and also grateful" to have a Jewish community, when asked about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's renewed appeal following yesterday's attack in Copenhagen.
The German government and other officials will do everything possible to ensure the safety of Jewish institutions and citizens in Germany, Merkel told reporters after Sunday's election in the northern city-state of Hamburg.
"We'd like to go on living well together with the Jews who are in Germany today," the chancellor added.
Netanyahu yesterday urged European Jews to emigrate to Israel after a Jewish man was killed in the attack outside Copenhagen's main synagogue, relaunching a call he made after Islamist attacks in Paris last month that left four Jews dead.
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French President Francois Hollande said today that Jews were welcome in Europe and France, while his Prime Minister Manuel Valls said he "regretted" Netanyahu's remarks.
French authorities also reported yesterday that 300 Jewish tombs had been defaced in the village of Montry in northeast France.
More than 100,000 Jews make their home in Germany, she noted.