List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Hermsdorf

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Hermsdorf contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Hermsdorf in the Reinickendorf 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 records a total of 29 stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Location Laying date Life
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Ida Arndt.jpg Ida Arndt Falkentaler Steig 16 June 7, 2005 Ida Arndt was born as Ida Heinrichs on May 6, 1883 in Berlin . She headed the orphanage of the women's association from 1833 for the best Israelite orphan girl after moving to Albrechtstrasse 10, today Falkentaler Steig 16. In 1927 she married the teacher Isidor Arndt. When the facility was renamed the Hermsdorf Jewish Children's and Youth Home in 1930/31, the Arndt couple handed over management to Recha Loevy. On November 5, 1942, Ida Arndt and her husband Isidor were deported from Jagowstrasse 2 in Moabit to Theresienstadt . On January 23, 1943, Ida Arndt was deported to Auschwitz , where she is considered missing. World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Isidor Arndt.jpg Isidor Arndt Falkentaler Steig 16 June 7, 2005 Isidor Arndt was born on October 4, 1869 in Schloppe . In 1927 he married Ida Heinrich, who at that time was running the orphanage of the women's association from 1833 for the best Israelite orphan girls in Hermsdorf . Up to this point he was a teacher at the girls' middle school of the Jewish community in Berlin in Mitte and was now part-time in the administration of the orphanage until the Arndt couple handed over the management to Recha Loevy in 1930/31. On November 5, 1942, Isidor Arndt and his wife Ida were deported from Jagowstrasse 2 in Moabit . He died on December 13, 1942 in the Theresienstadt ghetto . World icon
Stolperstein Bornepfad 4 (Hermd) Regina Bonis.jpg Regina Bonis Bornepfad 4-6 Sep 12 2008 Regina Bonis was born as Regina Stern on April 23, 1882 in Cabaj . The stateless widow lived in a small room in Hans Heinrich Meyer's household and presumably ran his household. She last had to work in the Weber and Co. company in Treptow before she was arrested on February 27, 1943 as part of the factory action and taken to the assembly camp on Grosse Hamburger Strasse . From there, on March 1, 1943, she was deported to Auschwitz on the 31st Osttransport , where she is considered missing. World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Adolf Broh.jpg Adolf Broh Falkentaler Steig 16 Dec 12, 2007 Adolf Broh was born on August 14, 1872 in Schrimm . Around 1900 he and his older brother Ephraim bought the Kussenow estate in the Pomerania province . Adolf Broh marries Regina Noah from the Schrimm district , her sister Regina married Adolf's brother Ephraim. On February 28, 1908, the son Regina and Adolf, Heinz Broh, was born. On May 1, 1909, the daughter Ruth followed. Both children first attended the village school in Kussenow, and were sent to Berlin to attend a secondary school , where they lived with their childless aunt Selma Latte. Ruth Broh married Max Jany, a wholesaler of agricultural products, in 1932 and lived with him at 45 Kissingenstrasse in Pankow . Heinz Broh stayed at Gut Kussenow and married Ruth Neumann in 1935. The Broh brothers' businesses suffered from the anti-Semitic pogroms from 1933 : At first their turnover fell sharply, later the employed farm workers sabotaged the business until the business was boycotted completely in 1937 . Adolf and Ephraim Broh then fled to Berlin with their families , where they moved into a furnished 6-room apartment in what is now 16 Falkentaler Steig. Instead of a children's home, there was now a small synagogue of the Jewish community on the ground floor . Adolf and Regina Broh's children fled to Chile and Palestine in 1939 . Adolf Broh was deported to Theresienstadt on September 14, 1942, together with his wife, on the 2nd large elderly transport ; on May 16, 1944, both were deported to Auschwitz , where they are considered missing. World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Ephraim Broh.jpg Ephraim Broh Falkentaler Steig 16 Dec 12, 2007 Ephraim Broh was born in Schrimm on August 20, 1866 . Around 1900 he and his younger brother Adolf bought the Kussenow estate in the Pomeranian province . To approximately 131 hectares operated the two brothers there agriculture and animal husbandry . Ephraim Broh married Rosa Noah, his brother Adolf married Rosa's sister Regina. The Broh brothers' businesses suffered from the anti-Semitic pogroms from 1933 : At first their turnover fell sharply, later the employed farm workers sabotaged the business until the business was boycotted completely in 1937 . Adolf and Ephraim Broh then fled to Berlin with their families , where they moved into a furnished 6-room apartment in what is now 16 Falkentaler Steig. Instead of a children's home, there was now a small synagogue of the Jewish community on the ground floor . Ephraim Broh was deported to Theresienstadt on September 14, 1942, together with his wife, on the 2nd large elderly transport ; on May 16, 1944, both were deported to Auschwitz , where they are considered missing. World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Regina Broh.jpg Regina Broh Falkentaler Steig 16 Dec 12, 2007 Regina Broh was born Regina Noah on December 9, 1877 in Moschin . Her parents were Natan and Flora Noah. She married Adolf Broh, with whom she had a son and a daughter. Her sister Ruth married Ephraim Broh, Adolf's brother. After the farm that her husband and brother-in-law ran together was boycotted, the two families fled to Berlin , where they moved into a furnished 6-room apartment in what is now Falkentaler Steig 16. Regina Broh was deported to Theresienstadt on September 14, 1942, together with her husband, on the 2nd large Alterstransport ; on May 16, 1944, both were deported to Auschwitz , where they are believed to have been lost. World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Rosa Broh.jpg Pink broh Falkentaler Steig 16 Dec 12, 2007 Rosa Broh was born Rosa Noah on March 12, 1868 in Moschin . Her parents were Natan and Flora Noah. She married Ephraim Broh, her sister Regina married Ephraim's brother Adolph. Ephraim and Rosa Broh's marriage remained childless. After the farm that her husband and brother-in-law ran together was boycotted, the two families fled to Berlin , where they moved into a furnished 6-room apartment in what is now Falkentaler Steig 16. Rosa Broh was deported to Theresienstadt on September 14, 1942, together with her husband, on the 2nd large Alterstransport ; on May 16, 1944, both were deported to Auschwitz , where they are considered missing. World icon
Stolperstein Bornepfad 4 (Hermd) Dan Bukofzer.jpg Dan Bukofzer Bornepfad 4-6 Sep 12 2008 Dan Bukofzer was probably born on January 29, 1939 in Berlin-Moabit . He was the second child of Max and Gerda, nee Wolff. One year after his birth, the family moved to Hermsdorf, where they lived in a single room that they could sublet. On March 1, 1943, Dan was arrested along with his sister Ruth and his mother and taken to a collection point, from where they were deported to Auschwitz on March 4, 1943 with the 34th Osttransport . There are no other documents about Dan Bukofzer in Auschwitz, from which it can be concluded that the four-year-old was murdered immediately after his arrival there. World icon
Stolperstein Bornepfad 4 (Hermd) Gerda Bukofzer.jpg Gerda Bukofzer Bornepfad 4-6 Sep 12 2008 Gerda Bukofzer was born on March 22, 1912 in Putzig as the daughter of Walter and Hedwig Wolff. She worked together with her husband Max in her in-laws' shop in Preussisch Eylau . Their daughter Ruth was born in Königsberg on August 6, 1935 . When Max's father was forced to sell the business, Gerda and Max moved with their daughter to Berlin, initially to 42 Rathenower Strasse in Moabit . Their son Dan was born here on January 29, 1939. In January 1940 the family moved to Hermsdorf to sublet with Hans Heinrich Meyer. After Max Bukofzer was arrested at the end of February 1943, Gerda Bukofzer and her children were arrested, presumably on March 1, 1943, and finally deported on March 3, 1943 on the 34th Osttransport to Auschwitz , where she is considered missing. World icon
Stumbling Stone Bornepfad 4 (Hermd) Max Bukofzer.jpg Max Bukofzer Bornepfad 4-6 Sep 12 2008 Max Bukofzer was born on October 13, 1902 in Domnau . His parents were Moritz and Marie, née Meyerowitz. Max was the third of a total of nine children. After his apprenticeship as a businessman, he worked like his wife Gerda in his parents' clothing store, which was located in Preussisch Eylau . Their daughter Ruth was born on August 6, 1935 in Königsberg . Max's father had been forced to sell his business in 1938, after which Max Bukofzer and his family moved to Berlin. They lived in 1939 at Rathenower Strasse 42 in Moabit , where their son Dan was born on January 29, 1939. In January 1940 the family moved to Hermsdorf to live with Hans Heinrich Meyer, in whose apartment they lived in a room. The family planned to flee to Cuba , but this was prevented by the start of the Second World War . Max Bukofzer had to do forced labor , most recently at Charlottenburger Motoren KG at Potsdamer Strasse 98 in Schöneberg . As part of the factory action , he was arrested on February 27, 1943 and deported to Auschwitz on March 1, 1943 with the 31st Osttransport . In Auschwitz he was given prisoner number 104606. For March 25, 1943, he is recorded in the prisoners' hospital book of the Monowitz camp , and his death on June 1, 1943 is recorded in the morgue book. World icon
Stolperstein Bornepfad 4 (Hermd) Ruth Bukofzer.jpg Ruth Bukofzer Bornepfad 4-6 Sep 12 2008 Ruth Bukofzer was born on August 6, 1935 in Königsberg as the first child of Max and Gerda. At that time, her parents lived at Kirchenstrasse 2 in Preußisch Eylau . When her father's family was forced to sell their business in 1938, the family moved to Berlin, first to Moabit , then in 1940 to Hermsdorf. On March 1, 1943, Ruth was arrested together with her brother Dan and her mother and taken to a collection point, from where they were deported to Auschwitz on March 4, 1943 with the 34th Osttransport . There are no further documents about Ruth Bukofzer in Auschwitz, from which it can be concluded that the seven-year-old was murdered immediately after her arrival there. World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Harry Gabriel-Redlich.jpg Harry Gabriel-Honest Falkentaler Steig 16 March 27, 2010 Harry Gabriel, born December 6, 1927 in Berlin , grew up in a children's home at Rosenthaler Straße 26 in Berlin-Wittenau, later he lived with his foster father Willy Redlich, who lived in the Hermsdorf synagogue of the Jewish religious association for the northern suburbs (today Falkentaler Steig 16) worked as a caretaker; the name of 14-year-old Harry Gabriel-Redlich is on the deportation list. of the 20th transport from the east of September 26, 1942 to Raasiku (the date of the deportation on the stumbling block is wrong). When the Stolperstein was laid, it was assumed that Harry Gabriel-Redlich was murdered in Raasiku, but he survived: he arrived in Switzerland on November 19, 1942 and was in a DP camp in Italy in 1946 World icon
Stolperstein Olafstr 8-10 (Hermd) Elise Hartmann.jpg Elise Hartmann Olafstrasse 8-10 June 7, 2005 * December 15, 1881; † February 25, 1944 in the mental hospital Obrawalde World icon
Stolperstein Olafstr 8-10 (Hermd) Hertha Hennig-Nissuhr.jpg Hertha Hennig-Nissuhr Olafstrasse 8-10 May 4, 2004 Hertha Hennig-Nissuhr was born on May 3, 1901. 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. She was murdered on May 29, 1944 in the Obrawalde sanatorium. World icon
Stolperstein Wachsmuthstr 9 (Hermd) Edith Kassel.jpg Edith Kassel Wachsmuthstrasse 9
(formerly Bahnhofstrasse 5)
July 5, 2008 Edith Kassel was born on May 9, 1937 in Berlin-Moabit . Her mother Ilse Kassel was in custody at the Moabit correctional facility at the time . Her godmother was Edith Jacobson , a friend of her mother's. Until Ilse Kassel was released, Edith grew up with her aunt Hilde, who lived with her husband Kurt Schneemilch on Hermsdorfer Damm 184. In September 1942 Ilse and Edith Kassel fled Berlin and found shelter in Alt Gurkowschbruch with Tony Grossmann , a former patient of Ilse Kassel. However, their hiding place was revealed and the Gestapo appeared on the farm. Ilse Kassel decided to commit suicide together with her daughter: Ilse Kassel drowned in the nets , but Edith was rescued and was first taken to a hospital in Driesen . She returned to her aunt for a short time, but was deported to Theresienstadt on October 15, 1943 on the 97th Alterstransport . On October 23, 1944, she was deported to Auschwitz , where she was presumably murdered immediately after the transport arrived on October 25, 1944. Her aunt Hilde's family escaped persecution by the National Socialists because her husband was considered Aryan. World icon
Stolperstein Wachsmuthstr 9 (Hermd) Ilse Kassel.jpg Use Kassel Wachsmuthstrasse 9
(formerly Bahnhofstrasse 5)
July 5, 2008 Ilse Kassel was born on June 9, 1902 in Berlin-Wittenau . Her parents were the medical officer Woldemar Kassel and his wife Hedwig, née Fürstenheim. Ilse Kassel had two siblings, Hilde and Bruno. From 1906, her father ran a doctor's practice in what is now Wachsmuthstrasse. Ilse Kassel took her Abitur in 1926 at the Tegeler Humboldt-Oberrealschule , after which she studied medicine in Berlin and Freiburg . She completed her specialist training again in Berlin, after the death of her father she took over his practice on August 31, 1930. As early as July 1, 1933, the authorities withdrew her medical license before she was interned in the Moabit correctional facility from 1935 to 1936 . Although she was acquitted and released from prison during the trial , she was arrested again after a short time and sentenced to three years in prison for “preparing for high treason” . Her daughter Edith was born in custody on May 9, 1937. In 1938, Ilse Kassel applied to leave Palestine . This was initially approved, but due to the start of the Second World War, it was no longer possible to leave the country. After her release from prison, she first worked as a nurse before doing forced labor in the arms industry. In September 1942 she went into hiding with her daughter and was hidden by a former patient, Tony Grossmann , on a farm in Alt-Gurkowschbruch . When the Gestapo appeared on the farm, Ilse Kassel decided to commit suicide with her daughter. Ilse Kassel drowned in the nets , her daughter was saved, but murdered in Auschwitz . The helper Mrs. Grossmann was sentenced to two and a half years in a concentration camp , but was released again after a short time. In 1993 she was honored with the Federal Cross of Merit. World icon
Stolperstein Schloßstr 1 (Hermd) Hertha Klein.jpg Hertha Klein Schlossstrasse 1 July 17, 2007 * July 20, 1894 in Böhmisch Leipa as Hertha Wiesenova, deported to Riga on August 15, 1942 , murdered there in September 1942 World icon
Stolperstein Schloßstr 1 (Hermd) Hugo Klein.jpg Hugo Klein Schlossstrasse 1 July 17, 2007 * March 10, 1890 in Berlin , deported to Riga on August 15, 1942 , murdered there in September 1942 World icon
Stolperstein Olafstr 8-10 (Hermd) Käthe Köppen.jpg Käthe Köppen Olafstrasse 8-10 May 4, 2004 Käthe Köppen was born on June 14, 1903. 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. She was murdered on January 24, 1944 in the Obrawalde sanatorium. World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Paul Latte.jpg Paul Latte Falkentaler Steig 16
(formerly Albrechtstrasse 10)
June 7, 2005 * October 2, 1878 in Bromberg ; † January 24, 1943 in Theresienstadt , deported on January 13, 1943 World icon
Stolperstein Falkentaler Steig 16 (Hermd) Selma Latte.jpg Selma Latte Falkentaler Steig 16
(formerly Albrechtstrasse 10)
June 7, 2005 * June 21, 1878 in Moschin as Selma Noah; † July 16, 1943 in Theresienstadt , deported on January 13, 1943 World icon
Stolperstein Bornepfad 4 (Hermd) Hans Heinrich Meyer.jpg Hans-Heinrich Meyer Bornepfad 4-6 Sep 12 2008 Hans Heinrich Meyer was born in Berlin on March 22, 1897 . His parents were the magistrate Dr. Heinrich Meyer and his wife Gertrud. Like his sister Gabriele, he was baptized Protestant . He passed his secondary school diploma in 1916 and then took part in the First World War as a soldier . Due to an illness, he could no longer be used on the war fronts , so that he started studying chemistry at Kaiser Wilhelm University as a soldier . He received his doctorate in 1929. Three years later he married Jolan Hagedorn, a Hungarian doctor, and moved with her to Hermsdorf . However, his wife moved back to Budapest in 1935, and their marriage ended in divorce in 1939. From 1940 onwards, Hans Heinrich Meyer had to do forced labor at the Scherb and Schwer company in Weißensee . As part of the factory action , he was arrested on February 26, 1943, before he was deported to Auschwitz on March 1, 1943 with the 31st Osttransport . There is no further evidence of him there; he was judged dead on March 14, 1953, and December 31, 1945 was set as the date of his death. World icon
Stolperstein Glambecker Weg 27a (Hermd) Frieda Rybski.jpg Frieda Rybski Glambecker Weg 27a May 4, 2004 Frieda Rybski was born on June 14, 1904 in Bunzlau . Her father was a shoemaker, she had four brothers and a sister. Frieda Rybski had the elementary school attended only by the year before graduation, then had milliner learned and was then used as a bookbinder , most recently, she worked in various factories. She was obliged to work in a machine factory in Borsigwald . She remained single and had no children. Until she was admitted, she lived with her parents and her older sister in a two-room apartment at Glambeckerweg 27.A medical history was examined on April 28, 1943 at the Herzberge Hospital and revealed a fainting spell in her youth, a miscarriage at the age of 24 Years, as well as in the years since 1941 further fainting attacks at home, in the train and in the factory. In Herzberge she was diagnosed with climacteric psychosis . On July 16, 1943, she was transferred to the Wittenauer Heilstätten . There, a permanent refusal to work and repeatedly expressed intentions to flee are recorded in her medical file. In addition to her psychological situation, the file describes visual and acoustic hallucinations as further symptoms . On September 14, 1943, she was proposed to be transferred to the Obrawalde sanatorium . Nevertheless, at the instigation of the relatives, a one-week vacation was granted in December 1943. However, the impressions of the air raids on Berlin worsened her condition, and on December 8, 1943 she was brought to Obrawalde. On March 23, 1944, Martha Becker was poisoned with a drug overdose in the Obrawalde sanatorium. World icon
Stolperstein Roswithastr 16 (Hermd) Bertha Scheibner.jpg Bertha Scheibner Roswithastrasse 16 May 5, 2003 Bertha Scheibner was born on May 27, 1896 in Brostau in the Glogau district. According to her own statements, she was born premaritally, her biological father was a pharmacist . Her mother was sad but not treated. The cook died of a heart attack and a brain attack in 1915 at the age of 44 . In the same year Bertha Scheibner showed acute symptoms of schizophrenia for the first time . After eight weeks, the symptoms subsided again, although she had not received any treatment during that time. In 1919 Bertha Scheibner married the hairdresser Karl, who was eight years her senior , and her stepfather's brother. It wasn't until shortly before the wedding that she found out that her stepfather was not her birth father. In 1921 their only son Günther was born. When she fell ill again in October 1927, she was admitted to a private mental hospital in Zepernick , where she was diagnosed with "schizophrenia". After a miscarriage , Bertha Scheibner was admitted to the Herzberge sanatorium in July 1929 , from where she was transferred to the sanatorium in Berlin-Buch in April 1930 . She was released in May 1930. Their marriage was divorced in 1934, the son then lived with his father and passed the Abitur . At the instigation of the Weißensee Hospital , Bertha Scheibner was re-admitted to the institutions in Buch in February 1935. On September 19, 1935, she was forcibly sterilized and then released. In May 1936 she was again admitted to the Herzberge Clinic and stayed there until October 1938. After her release, she initially stayed with her aunt for a year after her release, and from 1939 she worked for four years in an armaments factory. On December 15, 1943, Bertha Scheibner was admitted to the Wittenau sanatorium because a neighbor saw her wandering around only incompletely dressed and she had talked confusedly. During her stay in the clinic, she talked to herself and became loud more frequently, so she was isolated at least three times. On February 11, 1944, she was transferred to the Obrawalde sanatorium . Only six days later, her death was recorded due to a "weakness". However, the circumstances suggest that this entry was forged and she was actually poisoned with a drug overdose. World icon
Stumbling Stone Heidenheimer Str 7 (Hermd) Johanna Seiffert.jpg Johanna Seiffert Heidenheimer Strasse 7 May 5, 2003 Johanna Seiffert was born on September 23, 1908 in Berlin . Her family lived in Hermsdorf at what was then Steinmetzstrasse 7. Her father Paul Seiffert was initially chief postman , after retiring due to neurasthenia he worked as an accountant . Together with his wife Anna, he had four other children in addition to Johanna. The two sons were older than Johanna Seiffert, her two sisters younger. Johanna attended the Lyceum and - except for the last year - achieved good results. At that time she suffered from her remarkably small stature (she was only 140 centimeters tall even as an adult), felt that she was being watched and believed that she was being made fun of. After spending a year in a forester's house , her mood had improved, so that she attended commercial school and worked as a typist from 1926 to 1928 . During this time she had frequent mood swings and was easily irritable. In 1928 she was finally sent on a cure because of extreme nervousness . However, she had to break this off after a short time because her roommate could not stand it. She continued to be suspicious of her family and acquaintances and also announced a suicide . On September 21, 1929, she was diagnosed with "schizophrenia" for a week in the psychiatric clinic of the Charité added. Her health had not improved by the time she was released, but she still accepted a job. In addition to the previous symptoms , Johanna Seiffert had more frequent tantrums since then , which is why she was admitted to the Wittenau sanatorium on November 27, 1934 . Her condition did not improve there, she cursed for no apparent reason and was aggressive towards her fellow patients. On April 7, 1936, she was forcibly sterilized in the Spandau Hospital at the request of the director of the sanatorium and then released to her parents as "cured". She lived there for almost two years before her parents let her again on June 3, 1938 at the Wittenauer Heilstätten. She kept running away from home and harassing companies. On July 11, 1938, Johanna Seiffert was placed in a care facility in Glienicke . From there she was brought back to the sanatoriums on November 14, 1941 because she refused to eat and was aggressive towards fellow patients. In the sanatoriums her condition improved again, she was again oriented in terms of time and place and no longer needed so much care. She was transferred to the Obrawalde sanatorium on July 22, 1942 . There it is recorded that she became increasingly kataton and refused to eat. Her death is recorded for January 10, 1943 due to “exhaustion”, but it can be assumed that this entry was falsified to deceive the relatives and that she was actually poisoned with a drug overdose. World icon
Stumbling Stone Klosterheider Weg 1 (Hermd) Marie Thiele.jpg Marie Thiele Klosterheider Weg 1 May 5, 2003 Marie Thiele was born on December 4, 1896 in Berlin as the daughter of a businessman. After school she worked as a saleswoman and in 1914 married the engineer Siegfried Thiele. Their son was born in 1915. Marie Thiele had her first inpatient psychiatric treatment in 1938 after a few months during which she was restless and depressed because she was worried about her son, who was serving as a sergeant major in Austria . In April 1939 she was apprehended in Munich, confused, when she, suddenly stricken with a "wanderlust", wanted to travel to her son. She then spent four weeks in the psychiatric clinic of the Charité , then first they lived at home. On September 2, 1939, she was admitted to the sanatorium in Berlin-Buch for two weeks . She then stayed at home in Hermsdorf for a long time before she was brought to the Wittenau sanatorium by the police on February 14, 1941 . Here she was kept busy with housework , but also had to be isolated because of her unruly behavior. Although her condition had not improved, she was released home in June 1942. She was again admitted to the Wittenau sanatorium on December 10, 1942 by the police. Only five days later she was proposed to be transferred to the Obrawalde sanatorium , where she arrived on December 29, 1942. The few entries in her medical record from Obrawalde describe Marie Thiele as restless and irritable. Her death is recorded for March 24, 1944, the cause is given as acute inflammation of the kidneys , but it can be assumed that this entry was faked to deceive the relatives and that she was actually poisoned with a drug overdose. World icon
Stolperstein Berliner Str 20 (Hermd) Elly Wangenheim.jpg Elly Wangenheim Berliner Strasse 20 Dec 12, 2007 Elly Wangenheim was born on March 20, 1893 in Berlin . The house at Berliner Strasse 20, in which she lived with her parents Emma and Theodor Wangenheim and their three siblings, was built by her grandparents in 1860. From 1904 to Easter 1909, Elly Wangenheim attended the secondary girls' school in today's Olafstrasse in Hermsdorf, after she had finished elementary school . Together with her younger sister Lotte, she took over her father's cobbler 's shop, which was located in the family home. The two had to give up this business later, Elly Wangenheim had to do forced labor at Osram instead . Both sisters were taken to assembly camps at the end of February 1943 as part of the factory campaign . On March 1, 1943, Elly Wangenheim was deported to Auschwitz on the 31st Osttransport , where she is considered missing. World icon
Stolperstein Berliner Str 20 (Hermd) Erich Wangenheim.jpg Erich Wangenheim Berliner Strasse 20 Dec 12, 2007 Erich Wangenheim was born on October 1, 1887 in Berlin, the first child of Emma and Theodor Wangenheim. He was followed by his three sisters Betty (* May 5, 1890), Elly (* March 20, 1893) and Lotte (* April 24, 1895). Erich trained as a chemist and later owned the Paul Lustig drugstore on Bayerischer Platz in Schöneberg . Erich Wangenheim married Luise Auguste Wilhelmine Both (born December 23, 1883 in Christiankehmen district Darkehmen ) in Berlin on April 16, 1913 ; the time of the divorce or her death is not known. He concluded his second marriage with Martha Meilich, who was also not considered a Jew under the Nuremberg race laws . Martha had worked in the drugstore since 1929 before she became a co-owner in 1934 and a private relationship arose between her and Erich Wangenheim. In the years 1935 to 1936 the couple were repeatedly interrogated and harassed before they had to give up their business on November 2, 1939 as a result of the Aryanization . The couple planned to emigrate , but Erich Wangenheim had serious health problems in the meantime: In addition to his thyroid disorder , he was now also very diabetic and therefore in need of care, which made emigration impossible. Erich Wangenheim was arrested by the Gestapo in May 1942 and deported to Sachsenhausen concentration camp . There he died on July 7th, 1942, on the death certificate the cause of death is stated as "cardiac and circulatory weakness as a result of dysentery ". After that, his wife lived alone and - even after the end of the war - never married again. She died on September 10, 1984. World icon
Stumbling block Berliner Str 20 (Hermd) Lotte Wangenheim.jpg Lotte Wangenheim Berliner Strasse 20 Dec 12, 2007 World icon

Individual evidence

  1. a b Falkentaler Steig 16 . Isidor and Ida Arndt's life path. In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin June 7, 2005 ( spinnenwerk.de ( memento of March 7, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed on January 30, 2013]).
  2. a b deportation list of the 72nd transport of old people - sheet 2. In: statistik-des-holocaust.de. Retrieved January 30, 2013 .
  3. Arndt, Ida . In: Bundesarchiv (Hrsg.): Memorial book . Victim of the persecution of the Jews under the Nazi tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. 2nd, significantly expanded edition. tape  1 : A-F . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( bundesarchiv.de [accessed on January 30, 2013]).
  4. Arndt, Isidore . In: Bundesarchiv (Hrsg.): Memorial book . Victim of the persecution of the Jews under the Nazi tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. 2nd, significantly expanded edition. tape  1 : A-F . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( bundesarchiv.de [accessed on January 30, 2013]).
  5. ^ The life of Regina Bonis . In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin September 12, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( memento of March 7, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  6. a b Falkentaler Steig 16 . Adolf Broh's life path. In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin December 12, 2007 ( spinnenwerk.de ( Memento from May 28, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  7. a b Falkentaler Steig 16 . Ephraim Broh's life path. In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin December 12, 2007 ( spinnenwerk.de ( Memento from May 26, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  8. Broh, Regina . In: Bundesarchiv (Hrsg.): Memorial book . Victim of the persecution of the Jews under the Nazi tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. 2nd, significantly expanded edition. tape  1 : A-F . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( bundesarchiv.de [accessed on January 30, 2013]).
  9. ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names. Regina Broh. Yad Vashem , accessed March 6, 2013 .
  10. Broh, Rosa . In: Bundesarchiv (Germany) (Ed.): Memorial book . Victim of the persecution of the Jews under the Nazi tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. 2nd, significantly expanded edition. tape  1 : A-F . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( bundesarchiv.de [accessed on March 6, 2013]).
  11. ^ The Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names. Pink broh. Yad Vashem , accessed March 6, 2013 .
  12. Dan Bukofzer's life . In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin September 12, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( memento of March 7, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  13. ^ The life path of Gerda Bukofzer . In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin September 12, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( Memento from June 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  14. Life of Max Bukofzer . In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin September 12, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( memento of February 8, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed on January 30, 2013]).
  15. Ruth Bukofzer's life . In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin September 12, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( Memento from May 9, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  16. 20. Osttransport - Transportliste 125. In: statistik-des-holocaust.de, accessed on January 14, 2019.
  17. Switzerland, Jewish Arrivals, 1938–1945 via ancestry.com .
  18. ^ Holocaust: Survivor List from the files of the Jewish World Congress via ancestry.com .
  19. 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; 6.5 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  20. a b List of stumbling blocks in Reinickendorf. (PDF; 50 kB) (No longer available online.) In: berlin.de. Reinickendorf district office of Berlin, May 25, 2008, archived from the original on May 19, 2014 ; Retrieved January 23, 2013 .
  21. a b 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; 6.5 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  22. Edith Kassel's life path . In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin July 5, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( memento from March 6, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  23. a b Wachsmuthstrasse 9 . Ilse Kassel's life. In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin July 5, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( memento from February 6, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  24. ↑ The life of Hans Heinrich Meyer . In: Heimatmuseum Reinickendorf (Ed.): Stolpersteine ​​Berlin - Reinickendorf . Berlin September 12, 2008 ( spinnenwerk.de ( memento of November 2, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF) [accessed January 30, 2013]).
  25. ^ Joachim Richter-Geissler: Biography Frieda Rybski . 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. 44–45 ( zlb.de [PDF; 6.5 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  26. ^ Bente Seelig: Biography Bertha Scheibner . 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. 22–23 ( zlb.de [PDF; 6.5 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  27. ^ Günther Geil: Biography Johanna Seiffert . 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. 24–25 ( zlb.de [PDF; 6.5 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  28. ^ Kerstin Stiehler: Biography Marie Thiele . 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. 29–30 ( zlb.de [PDF; 6.5 MB ; accessed on January 14, 2019]).
  29. a b Elly Wangenheim's life . ( Memento from February 8, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF; 307 kB) Stolpersteine ​​in Reinickendorf . Reinickendorf Local History Museum, December 10, 2007.
  30. a b Erich Wangenheim's life . ( Memento from February 8, 2016 in the Internet Archive ; PDF; 298 kB) Stolpersteine ​​in Reinickendorf . Reinickendorf Local History Museum, December 10, 2007.

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