List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Alt-Treptow

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Alt-Treptow lists the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Alt-Treptow in the Treptow-Köpenick district . They remind of the fate of the people who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide under National Socialism. The columns in the table are self-explanatory. The table covers four stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Address and Coordinate ( Erioll world.svg) Laying date Life
Stolperstein Kiefholzstr 21 Werner Kerlekien.JPG Werner Kerlekien Kiefholzstrasse 21 World icon Oct 8, 2011 Werner Kerlekien, born on October 8, 1911, belonged to the religious community of Jehovah's Witnesses . He was executed on April 1, 1940 in Puławy , Poland for conscientious objection.
Stumbling Stone Karl-Kunger-Str 22 Elly Sieburg.JPG Elly Sieburg Karl-Kunger-Strasse 22
(formerly Graetzstrasse 22)
World icon Dec 10, 2007 Elly Sieburg, b. Cerf, born on April 9, 1887 in Halle , was a trader in trimmings and ran a laundry and handicraft shop with her daughter on Karl-Kunger-Strasse until 1938, which she had to give up after the November pogroms in 1938 . Then she had to work as a slave laborer in a textile factory. On February 27, 1943, as part of the factory campaign , she was taken to the Große Hamburger Strasse assembly camp, but her daughter managed to free her again. On January 10, 1944, she was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp , where she survived her imprisonment. In August 1945 she came back to Berlin on an ambulance and was taken to the Martin Luther Hospital , where she died on February 28, 1946 of the consequences of imprisonment.
Stumbling Stone Karl-Kunger-Str 4 (Alttr) Louis Sonnenfeld.jpg Louis Sonnenfeld Karl-Kunger-Strasse 4 22 Sep 2016
Stumbling Stone Karl-Kunger-Str 4 (Alttr) Marie Sonnenfeld.jpg Marie Sonnenfeld Karl-Kunger-Strasse 4 22 Sep 2016

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Johannes Wrobel: “Goodbye!” - Farewell letters from Jehovah's Witnesses sentenced to death in the Nazi regime . In: Marcus Herrberger (Ed.): Because it is written: “You shouldn't kill!” The persecution of religious conscientious objectors under the Nazi regime with special consideration of the Jehovah's Witnesses (1939–1945) . Vienna 2005, p. 237–326 ( jwhistory.net [accessed February 2, 2013]).
  2. Stolpersteine ​​in Berlin Treptow-Köpenick. (PDF; 6.7 MB) a documentation about 30 places of remembrance among us. Association of Antifascists Treptow e. V. and association of those persecuted by the Nazi regime - Bund der Antifaschisten Köpenick e. V., July 2008, pp. 6-7 , accessed on February 2, 2013 .