List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Kaulsdorf
The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Kaulsdorf contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Kaulsdorf 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 records a total of 12 stumbling blocks and can be partially sorted; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.
image | Surname | Location | Laying date | Life | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elise Block | Leopoldstrasse 32 | location | Nov 30, 2013 | * March 23, 1867 in Emden ; born Seligmann, widow. On September 14, 1942 with the transport I / 65, č. 6924 (second large elderly transport) deported to Theresienstadt / Ghetto , where she died on September 26, 1942, according to a death report of acute small intestinal inflammation. | |
Amalie Fischl | Hertwigswalder Steig 8 | location | Oct 25, 2010 | Amalie Fischl was born as Amalie Rosenstein on September 22, 1913 in Bochum . On March 4, 1943, she was deported with the 34th Osttransport to the Auschwitz concentration camp , where she is considered missing. | |
Else Fischl | Mädewalder Weg 37 | location | Aug 4, 2011 | Else Fischl was born Else Abeles on July 28, 1892 in Vienna . She was the mother of Emil and Ilse Fischl. Since 1924 she lived with Ilse in Mädewalder Weg 37. She worked for the cleaning company "Wullf und Pottien" at Späthstraße 50 in Britz . On March 4, 1943, she was deported with the 34th Osttransport to the Auschwitz concentration camp , where she is considered missing. | |
Emil Fischl | Hertwigswalder Steig 8 | location | Oct 25, 2010 | Emil Fischl was born on November 24, 1914 in Frankfurt (Oder) as the son of Else Fischl. He worked as a technician at a company in Tempelhof . On March 4, 1943, he was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp on the 34th Osttransport , where he is considered missing. | |
Ilse Fischl | Mädewalder Weg 37 | location | Aug 4, 2011 | Ilse Fischl was born on November 12, 1919 in Regensburg as the daughter of Else Fischl. Since 1924 she lived with her mother Else at Mädewalder Weg 37. On March 4, 1943, she was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp on the 34th transport to the east, where she is considered missing. | |
Jona Fischl | Hertwigswalder Steig 8 | location | Oct 25, 2010 | Jona Fischl was born on April 28, 1941 in Berlin as the daughter of Emil and Amalie Fischl. On March 4, 1943, she was deported with the 34th Osttransport to the Auschwitz concentration camp , where she is considered missing. | |
Carl Hotze | At the Wuhle 41 | 5th Dec 2019 | Marie-Luise and Carl Hotze were staunch communists who defied the National Socialist regime for their convictions and their belief in a communist future. Carl Hotze was first sent to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp and later to the Mauthausen concentration camp . After the liberation, he set out on foot from Austria to find out that his wife did not survive. Through the selfless actions of the Hotze couple, KPD comrades at risk have found a hiding place from persecution. In 1943 the Hotzes hid the Jewish widow Anna Degen and her then 11-year-old son Michael and ensured their survival. | ||
Marie-Luise Hotze | At the Wuhle 41 | 5th Dec 2019 | Marie-Luise Hotze was arrested in September 1943 and paid for her consistent stance on November 6, 1944 with her death in the Ravensbrück concentration camp . | ||
Hedwig Mentzen | Hannsdorfer Strasse 8 | location | May 12, 2016 | Hedwig Mentzen was born as Hedwig Kahn in 1886. She was one of nine children, her father a cattle dealer, her mother died young. She learned to be a kindergarten teacher, married Moritz Adler in Berlin in 1909, and Edmund Mentzen in 1915, who died in 1917 at the age of 46. He was of non-Jewish descent and belonged to the Protestant religious community. The marriage remained childless. In 1927 Hedwig Mentzen resigned from the Jewish community. Nevertheless, due to her Jewish origins, she was subject to persecution by the National Socialists. In the 1930s she lived in Krummhübel in the Giant Mountains, where she owned a small drugstore. During the November pogrom in 1938, she fled to Berlin and lived in various parts of the city to sublet until she was assigned a room with a kitchen in Billungstrasse 8 (today Hannsdorfer Strasse 8) in 1941. It was to be her last place of residence. In the transport list of the 11th transport to the east of March 28, 1942, Hedwig Mentzen is registered under the registration number 11994, identification card no. 0001 recorded. The transport went via the assembly camp in Levetzowstrasse in Tiergarten from the Grunewald train station to the Trawniki forced labor camp - to death. | |
Emil Roth | Hannsdorfer Strasse 8 | location | Aug 6, 2014 | Emil Roth was born on June 11, 1881. He was a graduate civil engineer and later worked as a civil servant. In 1929 he and his wife Emilie built the house in what is now Hannsdorfer Straße 8. He was released on April 7, 1933 and later made a job as a laborer at Daimler-Benz AG in Berlin-Marienfelde . On June 2, 1942, he and his wife were deported to Lublin in occupied Poland. There their trail is lost. | |
Emilie Roth | Hannsdorfer Strasse 8 | location | Aug 6, 2014 | Emilie Roth, b. Becker was born on March 6, 1882. On June 2, 1942, she and her husband were deported on the 14th transport from Grunewald train station to Lublin in occupied Poland. Her further fate is unknown. | |
Eva Wolff | Nentwigstrasse 10 | location | Nov 29, 2012 | * March 23, 1878 in Schenklengsfeld ; born Tannenberg. On June 2, 1942 with the XIV. Transport "Osten" presumably to Sobibor , then lost in Majdanek . |
Web links
Commons : Stolpersteine in Berlin-Kaulsdorf - Collection of images
- Stolpersteine in Berlin Kaulsdorf Pictures, information and locations of the Stolpersteine in Kaulsdorf
- Coordination Office Stolpersteine Berlin Information on the project "Stolpersteine" and biographies of the victims of National Socialism
- Stumbling blocks in the district - Marzahn-Hellersdorf district office of Berlin
Individual evidence
- ↑ 2. large age transport - transport list 31. statistik-des-holocaust.de; accessed on January 14, 2019
- ^ Block Elise: Obituary Report, Ghetto Theresienstadt. holocaust.cz; accessed on January 14, 2019
- ↑ a b c d e 4th project: Fischl family. (No longer available online.) In: stolpersteine-ma-he.jimdo.com. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015 ; Retrieved February 4, 2013 .
- ↑ a b c d Press and photo session on August 4th: Two new stumbling blocks are being laid in Marzahn Hellersdorf. Press release. Marzahn-Hellersdorf district office in Berlin, July 25, 2011, accessed on February 4, 2013 .
- ↑ a b Invitation to lay the stumbling block for Marie-Luise and Carl Hotze on December 5, 2019
- ↑ Stumbling block laid for Hedwig Mentzen: Torn from oblivion . lichtenbergmarzahnplus.de
- ↑ Press and photo session on August 6th: Laying of stumbling blocks for the Jewish couple Roth in Kaulsdorf, Hannsdorfer Str. 8 (press release from July 9th, 2014)
- ↑ 14. Osttransport - Transportliste 100. statistik-des-holocaust.de; accessed on January 5, 2019
- ↑ S-Z . 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 4 . Bundesarchiv, Koblenz 2006, ISBN 3-89192-137-3 ( online [accessed on February 4, 2013]).
- ↑ Stumbling block for Eva Wolff was on November 29th. Relocated by the women of the HellMa women's meeting place in Nentwigstrasse 10. Press release. Marzahn-Hellersdorf district office of Berlin, November 30, 2012, accessed on May 6, 2013 .