List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Heiligensee

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Heiligensee contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Heiligensee in the Reinickendorf district , which are intended to commemorate the fate of 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 eight stumbling blocks and can be partially sorted; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Address and Coordinate ( Erioll world.svg) Laying date Life
Stolperstein Isegrimsteig 28 (Heils) Rudolf Karl Behrens.jpg Rudolf Karl Behrens Isegrimsteig 28 World icon June 7, 2005 * January 27, 1910; † June 5, 1944 in the sanatorium Obrawalde
Stolperstein Süderholmer Steig (Heils) Jenny Hirschbruch.jpg Jenny Hirschbruch Süderholmer Steig in front of the club house of the "Kolonie am See" 5th Dec 2017
Stumbling Stone Schulzendorfer Str 44 (Heils) Johanna Pawlewicz.jpg Johanna Pawlewicz Schulzendorfer Strasse 44 World icon May 4, 2004 Johanna Pawlewicz was born on March 6, 1884. Your patient records from the Wittenau sanatoriums can no longer be found, so only the information from the admission books of the Wittenau sanatoriums and the death books of the Obrawalde sanatorium are available. Johanna Pawlewicz was murdered on July 27, 1944 in the Obrawalde sanatorium.
Stolperstein Hademarscher Weg 9 (Heils) Anna Rosalie Rochlitz.jpg Anna Rosalie Rochlitz Hademarscher way 9 World icon July 23, 2012 * September 24, 1887 as Anna Rosalie Schindler; † December 10, 1943 in the sanatorium Obrawalde
Stolperstein Hennigsdorfer Str 17 (Heils) Herbert Schmeisser.jpg Herbert Schmeisser Hennigsdorfer Strasse 17 5th Dec 2017
Stolperstein Hennigsdorfer Str 14 (Heils) Paul Terting.jpg Paul Terting Hennigsdorfer Strasse 14 World icon May 4, 2004 With Paul Terting (born October 4, 1889, † March 1941) a paralysis of the right half of the body was observed from the age of two . From the age of eleven he began to suffer from dizziness and later also seizures. Nothing is known about the treatment of this epilepsy until Terting was admitted to the Wuhlgarten Epileptic Institute on November 20, 1922 . His father had arranged for the admission because Terting had more and more seizures in public and was regularly brought home by the police. Close to his attacks, Terting was easily irritable, so that he was often isolated in Wuhlgarten; on the other hand, he was perceived as calm and friendly when there was no seizure. Treatment with anti-epileptic drugs known at the time did not respond to Terting. On February 1, 1929, he was transferred to the Buch sanatorium and from there to the Görden State Institution on December 5, 1929 , although there was no improvement in his condition here either; sometimes he was seriously injured in his seizures. He tried his best to keep himself occupied, read the hymnbook and wrote a lot. Even after another transfer on May 27, 1940 - this time to the Teupitz State Sanatorium - Paul Terting did not improve. The last entry in his medical record is from March 27, 1941 and only indicates a transfer without a destination. Paul Terting was gassed a few days later as part of the T4 campaign .
Stolperstein Wildganssteig 101 (Heils) Rosa Weissbach.jpg Rosa Weissbach Wildganssteig 101 5th Dec 2017
Stolperstein Wesselburer Weg 2a (Heils) Frieda Wessel.jpg Frieda Wessel Wesselburer Weg 2a
former Nelkenweg 567 of the "Waldessaum" colony
World icon May 4, 2004 Frieda Wessel (born February 19, 1906 in Berlin ; † 1941) was born as Frieda Manneck. She was the oldest child in her family and therefore had to help more in the household, which is why she did not finish school. After she was 17, she worked as a runner and factory worker before getting married in 1926. The marriage resulted in two sons. In July 1943, the family moved into an arbor in the “Waldessaum” garden colony, at that time with the address Nelkenweg 567 . Your stumbling block is laid here today. In January 1935 Frieda Wessel was admitted to the Wittenauer Heilstätten with the diagnosis of schizophrenia . Since schizophrenia was seen as a hereditary disease at that time , Frieda Wessel was suggested to have forced sterilization , which was carried out on August 13, 1935 in a hospital in Spandau against the express wishes of the Wessel couple. Her two sons were healthy at this point and showed no developmental disorders. After the operation, Frieda Wessel was released before she was picked up by a doctor on April 21, 1937 and admitted again. Their marriage was divorced before November 1937, and on December 13, 1937 Frieda Wessel was transferred to the Neuruppin sanatorium . She was murdered in a gas chamber in 1941 at the latest in the course of Operation T4 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The laying of further stumbling blocks . In: District Office Reinickendorf of Berlin - Department of Economy, Health and Administration, Planning and Control Center (Ed.): Stolperstein Brochure Reinickendorf . 4th edition. August 2006, p.  48–49 ( zlb.de [PDF; 2.1 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  2. Christina Härtel: Adult biographies . In: District Office Reinickendorf of Berlin - Department of Economy, Health and Administration, Planning and Control Center (Ed.): Stolperstein Brochure Reinickendorf . 4th edition. August 2006, p. 42–43 ( zlb.de [PDF; 2.1 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  3. 127 signs against forgetting. (No longer available online.) In: Der Nord-Berliner. The Nord-Berliner Zeitung und Zeitschriften Verlag GmbH, July 26, 2012, archived from the original on May 19, 2014 ; Retrieved October 29, 2012 .
  4. ^ Kerstin Stiehler: Biography of Paul Terting . In: District Office Reinickendorf of Berlin - Department of Economy, Health and Administration, Planning and Control Center (Ed.): Stolperstein Brochure Reinickendorf . 4th edition. August 2006, p. 45 f . ( zlb.de [PDF; 2.1 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  5. Christina König: Biography Frieda Wessel . In: District Office Reinickendorf of Berlin - Department of Economy, Health and Administration, Planning and Control Center (Ed.): Stolperstein Brochure Reinickendorf . 4th edition. August 2006, p. 46 f . ( zlb.de [PDF; 2.1 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).