List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Kladow

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Kladow contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Kladow 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 columns in the table are self-explanatory. The table covers a total of two stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Location Laying date Life
Stolperstein Sakrower Kirchweg 70a Kladow Johanna Castle 2012.jpg Johanna Castle Sakrower Kirchweg 70a location Oct 26, 2010 * June 1, 1885 as Johanna Bildheim in Salzkotten - Johanna Schloss lived with her husband Louis Schloss in Wolfenbüttel. Their daughter Lotte was born there on August 2, 1913, and their son Helmut two years later. When the circumstances in Wolfenbüttel got worse and worse for the Jewish family, they moved in 1937 to the weekend house of the already emigrated uncle von Louis Schloss in Kladow. In Sakrower Kirchweg 70a they lived in a large property with access to the Havel. The daughter later described the time in Kladow as very harmonious and shielded from the outside world, where the discrimination against Jewish people was getting worse and worse.

Son Helmut had already emigrated to Israel before, survived the war there and stayed there until his death in 1991. Daughter Lotte emigrated to Milan for a year, but because of the bad circumstances she came back to Berlin and looked for opportunities in England or in to emigrate to another country, which became impossible for her with the outbreak of war. In 1942 Johanna and Louis Schloss had to give up their house in Kladow and forcibly move to Mecklenburgallee in Charlottenburg. Johanna Schloss had to do forced labor in an armaments factory. On October 26, 1942, Johanna and Louis Schloss were deported to Riga and murdered there three days after their arrival.
The daughter Lotte was also supposed to be deported the same night, but she managed to escape when the Gestapo was already in her apartment. Together with her boyfriend and future husband Herbert Strauss, she lived underground in Berlin for six months until they managed to escape to Switzerland in 1943. From there they emigrated to the USA.

Stolperstein Sakrower Kirchweg 70a Kladow Louis Castle 2012.jpg Louis Castle Sakrower Kirchweg 70a location Oct 26, 2010 * January 18, 1881 in Zimmerrode - Louis Schloss was born in Zimmerrode, Hesse, but the family had lived in Wolfenbüttel since the end of the 19th century . His father ran a successful cattle trade that Louis inherited. He was raised Jewish and attended a Talmud school. He lived with his wife Johanna Schloss, née Bildheim, in Wolfenbüttel, where their daughter Lotte was born on August 2nd, 1913 and their son Helmut two years later. When the situation in Wolfenbüttel got worse and worse for the Jewish family, they moved in 1937 to the weekend house of their uncle, who had already emigrated, in Kladow. In Sakrower Kirchweg 70a they lived in a large property with access to the Havel. The daughter later described the time in Kladow as very harmonious and shielded from the outside world, where the discrimination against Jewish people was getting worse and worse. Son Helmut emigrated to Israel before that, survived the war there and stayed there until his death in 1991. Daughter Lotte emigrated to Milan for a year, but because of the bad circumstances she came back to Berlin and looked for opportunities there, to England or to emigrate to another country, which became impossible for her with the outbreak of war. In 1942 Johanna and Louis Schloss had to give up their house in Kladow and forcibly move to Mecklenburgallee in Charlottenburg. On October 26, 1942, Johanna and Louis Schloss were deported to Riga and murdered there three days after their arrival.
The daughter Lotte was also supposed to be deported the same night, but she managed to escape when the Gestapo was already in her apartment. Together with her boyfriend and future husband Herbert Strauss, she lived underground in Berlin for six months until they managed to escape to Switzerland in 1943. From there they emigrated to the USA.

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