Der Morgen was a German-Jewish literary magazine published in Berlin from April 1925 to October 1938.
The magazine was founded by Julius Goldstein in the hopes of advancing the "spiritual destiny of German Jewry".
[2] Its content included essays, articles, stories, poems, and book reviews, mostly by German-Jewish intellectuals.
[2][3] The content covered a diverse range of topics including philosophy, history, psychology, religion, and politics.
[2] Until 1933, when heavy government censorship was instituted, articles in Der Morgen often addressed Nazi ideology and antisemitism.