Berlin - Jewish members of the far-right Alternative for Germany party, or AfD, met in the southwestern German city of Wiesbaden on Sunday to create a Jewish section within the party — a move that drew strong condemnation from other Jews.

Nineteen people joined the new “Jews in the AfD” group, local media reported.

A leading member of the group, Wolfgang Fuhl, told the German news agency dpa, that only AfD members who were ethnically or religiously considered Jewish, could participate in the new group.

Some 250 people protested against the Jewish AfD group in nearby Frankfurt.

“You’re not getting a kosher stamp from us,” said Dalia Grinfeld, the leader of the Jewish Students Union of Germany.

Meron Mendel, the director of the Anne Frank Educational Center, called the creation of the group “a PR stunt by the far right,” dpa reported.

Seventeen Jewish organizations put out a joint statement earlier this week saying, “the AfD is a party in which anti-Semitism ... and the denial of the Shoah have a home.”