List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Biesdorf
The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Biesdorf contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Biesdorf in the Marzahn-Hellersdorf district , which 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 a total of five 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 | |
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Jenny Cohn |
Otto-Nagel-Strasse 19 (formerly Königstrasse) |
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March 26, 2010 | Jenny Cohn was born on June 29, 1891 in Rogasen . She was single and had German citizenship. She was persecuted because of her Jewish belief. Further biographical information can no longer be determined today. She died on November 25, 1941 while being deported to the Kauen ghetto . |
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Fanny Feibusch |
Otto-Nagel-Strasse 38 (formerly Königstrasse) |
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June 18, 2003 | Like her husband Philipp Feibusch, Fanny Feibusch, née Alkus, came from Rogasen , where they married in the early 1920s. A short time later the family moved to Berlin-Biesdorf. Fanny Feibusch ran a small hardware store. In January 1923, their only daughter, Margot Edith, was born. After the family was attacked by the Nazis in June 1938, the Feibuschs gave up their apartment and business in Biesdorf and from then on lived in sublet with a Jewish family in Moabit . At the end of March 1939 the family was able to emigrate to Great Britain with the help of American relatives . Since they left with a tourist visa, they could only take with them 10 marks per person and, even as they were not given a work permit in Great Britain, they had to rely on the help of their relatives. A few months after the start of the Second World War , Fanny and Philipp Feibusch were interned in Great Britain as hostile foreigners on the Isle of Man , where they spent about a year. The family emigrated to the United States in October 1948 and settled in San Francisco . Fanny Feibusch died in July 1967. |
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Margot Edith Feibusch |
Otto-Nagel-Strasse 38 (formerly Königstrasse) |
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June 18, 2003 | In January 1923 Margot Edith was born as the only daughter of Philipp and Fanny Feibusch. After the family was attacked by the Nazis in June 1938, the Feibuschs gave up their apartment and business in Biesdorf and from then on lived in sublet with a Jewish family in Moabit . At the end of March 1939 the family was able to emigrate to Great Britain . A few months after the start of the Second World War , her parents were interned in Great Britain as hostile foreigners on the Isle of Man , where they spent about a year. Margot Edith was allowed to stay in London. In February 1941, she received a work permit there and took up an office job. The family emigrated to the United States in October 1948 and settled in San Francisco . Margot Edith married in 1955 and has been called Braun since then. |
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Philipp Feibusch |
Otto-Nagel-Strasse 38 (formerly Königstrasse) |
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June 18, 2003 | Philipp Feibusch, like his wife Fanny Feibusch, came from Rogasen , where they married in the early 1920s. A short time later the family moved to Berlin-Biesdorf. Philipp Feibusch founded a pipe laying and plumbing shop. In January 1923 the daughter Margot Edith was born. After the family was attacked by the Nazis in June 1938, the Feibuschs gave up their apartment and business in Biesdorf and from then on lived in sublet with a Jewish family in Moabit . At the end of March 1939 the family was able to emigrate to Great Britain with the help of American relatives . Since they left with a tourist visa, they could only take with them 10 marks per person and, even as they were not given a work permit in Great Britain, they had to rely on the help of their relatives. A few months after the start of the Second World War , Fanny and Philipp Feibusch were interned in Great Britain as hostile foreigners on the Isle of Man , where they spent about a year. The family emigrated to the United States in October 1948 and settled in San Francisco . Philipp Feibusch died in October 1977. |
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Rudolf Ledetsch | Gleiwitzer Strasse 4 |
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Apr 25, 2014 | Rudolf Ledetsch was born in 1880. His fate after his deportation in 1943 is unknown. |
Web links
Commons : Stolpersteine in Berlin-Biesdorf - Collection of images
- Stumbling blocks in the district - Marzahn-Hellersdorf district office
- Stolpersteine in Berlin Biesdorf Pictures, information and locations of the Stolpersteine in Biesdorf
- Coordination Office Stolpersteine Berlin Information on the project “Stolpersteine” and biographies of the victims of National Socialism
Individual evidence
- ↑ Press release on the stumbling block for Jenny Cohn ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the web archive archive.today )
- ↑ a b Feibusch family ( Memento from July 3, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )