Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Evangelical Lutheran Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn
logo
legal form Association of persons
founding Motherhouse for Church Diakonia Munich 1946
Takeover of legal succession by DWH 1974
Seat Bischofswiesen
purpose Services for people in need of assistance and care
Chair Heike Winkler
Website www.dw-hohenbrunn.de

The Evangelical Lutheran Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn , (short Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn abbreviated DWH) is a diaconal organization in old Bavaria that works for people in need of care and has its nominal board seat in the Hohenbrunn district of Riemerling. This economically independent sponsor of diaconal institutions is one of the largest members of Diakonisches Werk Bayern e. V. , which in turn is part of the Evangelical Work for Diakonie and Development e. V. is organized.

The Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn developed in 1974 as the legal successor to the mother house for church diaconia in Munich , founded in 1946 , which was recognized as a non-governmental corporation under public law (KdöR) as early as 1950 . It has its nominal board seat in the Hohenbrunn district of Riemerling.

The central administration of Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn is in the district of Berchtesgadener Land in the intergenerational living environment Insula in the Bischofswiesener district Strub, which is equipped with several facilities and its own Insula church . One of the focal points of the largest location, Lebenswelt Insula , which also received a lot of attention in the media at times, is the interdisciplinary treatment of the nutritional and metabolic disease obesity in young people aged 14 to 21 years. At other locations the Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn operates senior living and care facilities, u. a. also with a focus on the care of people with dementia .

history

planning phase

Some Protestant women as refugees from former German territory east of the Oder-Neisse line in the Diaspora of the Catholic dominated Bayern were planned shortly after the Second World War a parent to establish that aware of the name and concept of a traditional " deaconess house “ Should take off and be located in the Munich area. Hans Meiser (1881–1956) as regional bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria and the dean Friedrich Langenfaß supported the plan. They won in July 1945, the date in the Diakonissenanstalt Neudettelsau active Superior Sister Clothilde Reutzel, for taking over the line. At a meeting on November 26, 1945 between Hans Meiser and Friedrich Hofmann (pastor of Munich Christ Church and after its establishment the first rector of the parent company), the name "Mother House for church diakonia" was officially confirmed by the Bishop on condition Quote : it should not " Afterimage of Neudettelsau " become. Hofmann agreed with him and noted in his diary about this conversation that he saw the aim of the project, quote : “ To develop a type of female diakonia that gives young people easier access to church service than the old-style mother houses would do. "

Foundation, first fields of work and locations

The foundation was the primary broadcast ceremony occurred on March 25, 1946th At the beginning, the Inner Mission Munich, according to today's terminology, was the sponsor . In this constellation, the parent company was initially a registered association . From April 1, 1946, the motherhouse found its first home in a rear building of the partially destroyed Stöckerhaus ( Landwehrstrasse 81 ), later it moved to Munich's Magdalenenstrasse, to finally move into its own house in the Hohenbrunn district of Riemerling near Munich.

The sisters initially did their service for the Munich Evangelical Station Mission and in youth work in war-torn Munich, including the district . In addition, there was work in the Munich- Laim refugee camp , in the hospital and the associated retirement home in Ottobrunn , in the camp welfare in Traunstein , in the community nursing of eight community wards in Munich-Allach , -Laim, -Kreuzkirche, Dachau , Weilheim , Ottobrunn, Grafing and Berchtesgaden as well as in the Diakonie-Dorf Herzogsägmühle . The duties in Herzogsägmühle included serving war casualties and physically handicapped young people.

When they started their service in the Insula in the Bischofswiesen district of Strub , the sisters were active in a total of 27 fields of work. In the course of the preparations for the establishment of a permanent location on the insula , the desire of the sisters for more independence in the implementation of their projects increased. On December 20, 1949, they decided to part with the Inner Mission Munich as the previous agency in their fields of work. Subsequently, on April 29, 1950 , the parent company was given the status of a public corporation by the Bavarian State Ministry for Education and Culture . For this purpose, a council of sisters was set up and on May 9th a board of trustees was constituted .

In the 1950s, a permanent location developed in Ottobrunn , where a hospital, an old people's home and a vocational school with a two-year training course for nursing were set up. The headquarters of the parent company also found a temporary home in Ottobrunn from 1955 onwards, only to later find its place in the Hohenbrunn district of Riemerling until 1967 . When and why the location in Ottobrunn was given up, despite its size, cannot currently be proven with a reliable source, but it may be due to the restructuring or division of the parent company for church social welfare in Munich in 1974 .

Restructuring and succession

In the mid-1960s, an organizational restructuring of the mother house for church diakonia began as a whole, and since 1967 the former mother house building in the Hohenbrunn district of Riemerling has been used as a "house in the forest" (today: "house 2") by the Lore Malsch senior citizens' home and care center utilized.

In 1974 the motherhouse for church diakonia was divided into the Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn and the association of the Ottobrunn Diakonie Sisterhood . While the Ottobrunn Diakonie Sisterhood joined the Evangelical Sisters' Ring in Bavaria and the Zehlendorfer Verband , the Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn took over the legal succession of the parent company as a corporation under public law, including the property and sponsorship of the existing facilities.

Facilities

Living environment Insula / headquarters

In the Bischofswiesen district of Strub , the area of ​​today's "Lebenswelt Insula" was built on during the National Socialist era and only used as a sports school for the BDM and in the 1940s by the Wehrmacht. After the end of the war, the buildings were used by the special organization of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) as a repatriation camp for displaced persons (DP) until 1946 . From 1947 onwards, under the sponsorship of the International Refugee Organization (IRO) and in cooperation with the Lutheran World Federation, they offered accommodation, in particular for Latvian refugees who had not been repatriated and a Latvian school. In 1949 the sponsorship changed to the Inner Mission Munich .
On May 6, 1951, after appropriate renovations, the buildings were given their new use as an Evangelical Lutheran old people's home and were ceremoniously inaugurated. The international nursing home primarily served the sick and retired refugees. Those who have not been repatriated or for whom no country of immigration could be found. At this ceremony in the presence of numerous high-ranking domestic and foreign guests of honor, the Insula Church , which was converted from a gymnasium into a place of worship, was also handed over to its destination.
After the withdrawal of the IRO, the sponsorship of the Insula initially switched to the Inner Mission , which received a 50-year lease from the Bavarian Ministry of Finance in 1950 . On June 2, 1950, a contract was signed between the Free State of Bavaria , the IRO, the Lutheran World Federation , the Regional Association of the Inner Mission and the parent company on the future legal ownership, administration and management of the facility.

The core of the Insula environment is a senior living and care center with the associated Insula Church . Other facilities on the site include a vocational school for geriatric care and geriatric care assistance , a kindergarten with a day nursery and day- care center as well as an obesity rehabilitation center and an obesity group. The work of the obesity rehabilitation center was presented in 2009/2010, especially with regard to interdisciplinary treatment and care, in longer television magazine reports by ARD , ZDF , RTL and BR .

The central administration of Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn is also housed in the buildings of Lebenswelt Insula .

Senior living and care center Lore Malsch

Until 1967, the administration building of the mother house for church diaconia in Munich was located in the Hohenbrunn district of Riemerling near Munich . The administration building then became part of the “Lore Malsch” senior living and care center as a house in the forest together with the Lore Malsch house . An open dementia center has now also been integrated into the usual concept of such a facility in the “Lore Malsch” .

November 2014 was the hitherto unused for some time, as today House 2 designated house in the woods on six floors for refugees living group Riemerling , a body of the Inner Mission Munich belonging Evangelical Child and Youth Services Feldkirchen .

The senior living and care center "Lore Malsch" in Hohenbrunn is only the nominal seat of the board of the Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn , the central administration is located in the living environment Insula .

Taufkirchen senior citizens' residence

The senior citizens 'residence "Am Hachinger Bach" is a senior citizens' home and nursing home in Taufkirchen near Munich and also offers short-term care.

St. Michael care center

The St. Michael care center in Ottobrunn has been offering day care on weekdays for people in need since 1998 and, since 2013, the first two shared apartments for people with dementia in the Munich district .

literature

  • Marita Krauss : Evangelical in Munich - Karl Buchrucker (1827–1899) pioneer of Bavarian diakonia . Volk publishing house. Munich, 2009. ISBN 978-3937-20064-4 .
  • Christiane Schiedeck: Ottobrunner Chronicle . Abbrev. Munich, 1988.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Imprint of the Diakoniewerk Hohenbrunn homepage
  2. ^ Daniel Wagner: Diakonie - Unknown giant, well-known dwarf . Publication of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria . Munich, 2015.
  3. a b c d e Christiane Schiedeck: Ottobrunner Chronik . Abbrev. Munich, 1988. pp. 14-54.
  4. Helmut Baier: Charity under the swastika. The Inner Mission Munich in the time of National Socialism . Association for Bavarian Church History. Nuremberg, 2008. pp. 55 and 139.
  5. a b Christiane Schiedeck: Ottobrunner Chronik, ibid. P. 18.
  6. ^ Decisions in church matters . In: Volume 5 "1959/61". De Gruyter. Berlin, 1967. p. 180.
  7. ^ Christiane Schiedeck: Ottobrunner Chronik, ibid. P. 61 ff.
  8. a b c Chronicle ( Memento of the original from March 2, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , online at lore-malsch.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.lore-malsch.de
  9. To Ottobrunner Diakonie-Schwesternschaft eV ( Memento of the original from March 23, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Website of the Zehlendorfer Association for Evangelical Diakonie , online at zehlendorfer-verband.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.zehlendorfer-verband.de
  10. a b c d Lebenswelt Insula , section history , online at dw-hohenbrunn.de
  11. ^ Christiane Schiedeck: Ottobrunner Chronik, ibid. P. 157 ff.
  12. Ieva Zake: American Latvians Politics of a Refugee Community . Transaction Publishers. New Brunswick, 2010. p. 32. ISBN 978-1412-81451-5 .
  13. a b berchtesgaden-evangelisch.de ( Memento of the original from June 30, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. To the Insula Church on the homepage of the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Berchtesgaden @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.berchtesgaden-evangelisch.de
  14. ^ Christiane Schiedeck: Ottobrunner Chronik, ibid. Pp. 47-53.
  15. International Nursing Home . In: Süddeutsche Zeitung of May 7, 1951. Süddeutscher Verlag. Munich, 1951.
  16. ^ Christiane Schiedeck: Ottobrunner Chronik, ibid. P. 63.
  17. Web pages on the insula world - location, chronicle , online at dw-hohenbrunn.de
  18. Obesity rehabilitation center INSULA , article in the TV magazine Brisant of ARD from April 21, 2010, online at YouTube
  19. obesity rehab center INSULATION , contribution in the TV magazine Hello Germany the ZDF of 11 April 2010 online at YouTube
  20. obesity rehab center INSULATION , contribution in the TV magazine Explosive - The Magazine for RTL , online at YouTube
  21. INSULA obesity rehabilitation center , article in the television magazine Gesundheit! des BR , online at YouTube
  22. Websites on Lore Malsch senior living and care center , online at lore-malsch.de
  23. ↑ Housing group Riemerling ( Memento of the original from January 24, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Website of child and youth welfare in Feldkirchen. Munich, 2016. Retrieved January 23, 2016.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.im-muenchen.de
  24. Websites on the Taufkirchen senior citizens' residence , online at dw-hohenbrunn.de
  25. Websites on the St. Michael care center , online at dw-hohenbrunn.de
  26. Heike Woschée: Ottobrunn - Dementia WG opened in the Münchner Wochenanzeiger on June 13, 2013, online at wochenanzeiger.de

Web links