List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Grünau

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Grünau includes the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Grünau 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 includes two stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Laying date Life
Stolperstein.Grünau.Wassersportallee 34.Hannelore Salinger.4189.jpg Hannelore Salinger Water sports avenue 34 Dec 10, 2007 Hannelore Salinger was born on January 10, 1922 in Berlin. She was the only daughter of the pharmacist Max Salinger and his wife Jenny Salinger (née Salomon). Her mother died in 1932, when she was only 10 years old. From 1939 until her deportation, she had to do forced labor in the Siemens-Schuckert works in Gartenfeld, a location in Berlin-Siemensstadt in the Spandau district . On June 28, 1943, she was deported from the Jewish Hospital at Iranische Strasse 2 to Auschwitz, where she was murdered at an unknown time. World icon
Stolperstein.Grünau.Wassersportallee 34.Max Salinger.4186.jpg Max Salinger Water sports avenue 34 Dec 10, 2007 Max Salinger was born on October 17, 1865 in Marienburg / West Prussia. His parents were Maier Salinger (born around 1835 in Baldram ; died on February 17, 1912 in Marienburg) and Ida Salinger (born around 1835 in Caro in Fordon ; died on January 10, 1909 in Marienburg). He had at least six siblings, Louis (born August 31, 1861 in Marienburg, died November 29, 1923 in Marienburg), Sara (born December 28, 1862 in Marienburg, married in 1886 to Bernhard Benjamin, deported on August 18 1942 to Theresienstadt, date of death September 7, 1942), Therese (born on May 6, 1864 in Marienburg, deported on August 30, 1942 to Theresienstadt; date of death November 10, 1942), Friederike (born on May 22, 1867 in Marienburg, deported on August 30, 1942 to Theresienstadt; date of death October 29, 1942), Julie (born September 27, 1868 in Marienburg, married in 1904 to Wolff Wallheimer, deported from Hanover to Theresienstadt on July 23, 1942; date of death December 10, 1942) and Johanna (born on July 28, 1872 in Marienburg, married to Karl Polak in 1906, died on May 9, 1941 in Hamburg).

From 1916 he ran a pharmacy in Grünau , the "Grünauer Apotheke" in Friedrichstrasse 1a (since 1935 Regattastrasse). On February 2, 1918, he married Jenny Salomon (born December 17, 1876 in Bernburg) in Berlin-Schöneberg . In the 1930s he bought the house in the water sports avenue. He had to lease his pharmacy from 1938 and later sell it. In September 1940 he moved to Schöneberg with his daughter Hannelore Ida; his wife Jenny had died in 1932. On August 27, 1942, he was deported from Innsbrucker Strasse 21 with the 51st Alterstransport from Berlin to the Theresienstadt concentration camp , where he died on September 29, 1942, officially of “acute intestinal catarrh”.

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Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Salinger, Hannelore index card Reichsvereinigung der Juden
  2. Death register 1893–1937 (PDF) P Rep. 613 Berlin-Grünau registry office on page 113 (PDF, 169.8 MB)
  3. Transport list on statistik-des-holocaust.de
  4. ^ Salinger, Hannelore Ida in the memorial book on bundesarchiv.de
  5. ^ Benjamin Sara: Obituary, Ghetto Theresienstadt
  6. ^ Salinger Therese: Obituary, Ghetto Theresienstadt
  7. ^ Salinger Friederike: Obituary, Ghetto Theresienstadt
  8. Wallheimer Julie: Death display Theresienstadt ghetto
  9. Polak, Johanna index card Imperial Association of Jews
  10. Treptow-Köpenick memorial sites. (PDF; 18.2 MB) On the stumbling blocks of the Salinger family in Grünau on page 119. P. 256 , accessed on May 30, 2019 .
  11. ^ Grünauer pharmacy and drugstore, pharmacist Max Salinger database of Jewish businesses in Berlin 1930–1945
  12. Transport list on statistik-des-holocaust.de
  13. ^ Salinger Max: Obituary, Ghetto Theresienstadt on holocaust.cz