List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Alt-Treptow
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 ( ) | Laying date | Life | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Werner Kerlekien | Kiefholzstrasse 21 | 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. | ||
Elly Sieburg |
Karl-Kunger-Strasse 22 (formerly Graetzstrasse 22) |
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. | ||
Louis Sonnenfeld | Karl-Kunger-Strasse 4 | 22 Sep 2016 | |||
Marie Sonnenfeld | Karl-Kunger-Strasse 4 | 22 Sep 2016 |
Web links
Commons : Stolpersteine in Berlin-Alt-Treptow - Collection of images
Individual evidence
- ↑ 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]).
- ↑ 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 .