List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Falkenhagener Feld
The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Falkenhagener Feld contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Falkenhagener Feld in the Spandau district , which remind of the fate of the people who were murdered, deported, expelled or driven to suicide during National Socialism. The table is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.
image | Surname | Location | Laying date | Life | |
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Regina Postrong | Pionierstrasse 69 | location | Oct 26, 2010 | Born in 1914 in Cologne as Regina Schönberg. She was Protestant and was considered Jewish again according to the Nuremberg Race Laws of 1935. By profession she was a corset worker, but most recently worked as a forced laborer in a nursery at Pionierstrasse 69, where she also lived in a furnished room. Regina Schönberg was married and probably had one child. Her husband Hans died in 1937. On March 27, 1945, she was deported on the last transport from Berlin to Theresienstadt . Evidence was found that she was in a DP camp in Bamberg in 1948 and was thus able to survive the Nazi persecution. It is very likely that she then emigrated to New York via Bremen in the USA. Information about Regina Postrong is not very secure because she was recorded with different names and dates of birth. This, and the fact that she was only deported so shortly before the end of the war, suggest that she was able to go into hiding for some time. |
Web links
Commons : Stolpersteine in Berlin-Falkenhagener Feld - Collection of images
Individual evidence
- ↑ Transport list on statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ↑ Regina Postrong on a list of names issued in Bremen-Grohn: transport ship (USS General Haan, USS General Howze); Transit countries and emigration destinations: Canada, USA
- ↑ Regina Postrong. Coordination Office Stolpersteine Berlin, accessed on February 4, 2013 .