“For many Germans, no one in their right mind would be anti-Semitic and there is an astonishment that they have to deal with it again.”

BERLIN — Avraham Granov joined a gym in February, visiting two or three times a week.

Soon other members started making comments to him suggesting Jews control the world and the Palestinian territories should be free.

Granov is an Orthodox Jew who wears a kippah, the traditional Jewish head covering, but hides it with a hat in public.

Berlin resident Avraham Granov and his son Baruch outside of a Jewish kindergarten in Berlin.HC Plambeck / for NBC News

While Granov admits such remarks aren't a "catastrophe," they have left him rattled and, like a growing number of Jewish residents here in Germany’s capital, he says he feels a little less comfortable than they once did. He now goes to the gym less often and seldom after dark.

"I feel it," he told NBC News.

Anti-Semitism is a particularly sensitive issue in Germany, given its history. Incidents that may not make headlines elsewhere, or would be quickly forgotten, provoke bouts of soul-searching here.

Chancellor Angela Merkel recently warned that a "different type of anti-Semitism" had taken root in the country, highlighting the far-right as an issue but also blaming "refugees" and "people of Arab origin." Her government appointed a new commissioner to fight the problem.

On the surface, Jewish life in Berlin is flourishing. Two weeks ago, the Chabad Lubavitch synagogue celebrated five births, a bar mitzvah and an engagement. The city is home to several kindergartens, two schools and eight synagogues, and a new Jewish community center is planned.

But other parents at the religious school where Granov sends his son cite an unsettling number of low-level incidents of anti-Semitism that seem to have increased in recent years.

Some tell of being spit at on the street or ..read more at NBC News