List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Lankwitz

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The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Lankwitz contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Lankwitz in the Steglitz-Zehlendorf 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 20 stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.

image Surname Location Laying date Life
Stolperstein Mozartstr 22 (Lankw) Dora Freudenthal.jpg Dora Freudenthal Mozartstrasse 22 June 16, 2018 Dora Goldschmidt was born on October 8, 1876 in Hanover as the daughter of Levi Salomon Goldschmidt and his wife Jette / Henriette. The family lived in Hamburg until Dora married the merchant Hermann Freudenthal in Hamburg on October 29, 1898 and moved with him to Berlin. He was the owner of a business for the wholesale trade in gold goods and watch chains. The business address at Alexandrinenstraße 25 II was identical to the residential address in the first few years. The son Ernst was born on June 24, 1905 and the daughter Lucie / Lotte on February 20, 1909. From 1909/10 the Freudenthals lived in an apartment at Augsburger Strasse 64. Dora Freudenthal only gave up this apartment after the death of her husband on November 14, 1929. She moved to live with her son Ernst at Helmstedter Strasse 27 in Wilmersdorf. He emigrated in April 1933. After 1935, their daughter Lucie / Lotte Freudenthal, married Liebesschuetz, left Germany with her husband and daughter Irene, who was born in Brandenburg in 1934. Dora Freudenthal now moved to Mozartstrasse 22 in Lankwitz. Until her deportation in 1942, she lived there as a subtenant with the factory owner Julius Goehr and his wife Gertrud. Julius Goehr and Siegmund Dunkel, who lived with non-Jewish wives in so-called mixed marriages, were the owners of the apartment building on Mozartstrasse. On September 11, 1942, Dora Freudenthal and 99 other Jews were deported from Anhalter Bahnhof to the concentration camp in Theresienstadt. From there she was taken to the extermination camp in Treblinka on September 29, 1942 and murdered. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Nicolaistr 38 (Lankw) Martha Israelski.jpg Martha Israelski Nicolaistrasse 38 June 25, 2015 Martha Josephsohn was born on January 4, 1878 in Königsberg as the daughter of Aron Josephsohn and his wife Berta, born Rosen, she had an older sister Friederike. She married and took her husband's name "Israelski". Whether she had children could not be determined, her husband died and in 1939 she lived in the house of her sister Friederike Lichtenstein, who was also widowed, at Nicolaistraße 38 in Lankwitz. Her sister had to sell the house to the German Reich - Luftfahrt -, Martha and her sister Friederike had to move to Güntzelstrasse 60. On September 5, 1942, she was deported from there to Riga, and on September 8, 1942, she was murdered. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Havensteinstrasse 18 (Lankw) Alice Kirchner.jpg Alice Kirchner Havensteinstrasse 18
formerly Havensteinstrasse 16e
Apr 27, 2012 Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Waldmannstr 1 (Lankw) Charlotte Kobrak.jpg Charlotte Cobrak Waldmannstrasse 1 July 16, 2007 Charlotte Kobrak was born Charlotte Stern on October 30, 1893 in Breslau . She was a sister of the historian Fritz Stern . Before marrying Richard Kobrak, she worked as a math and science teacher . On March 17, 1943 , she was deported to Theresienstadt on the 4th large elderly transport ; on October 19, 1944, she was deported to Auschwitz , where she died in October 1944. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Waldmannstr 1 (Lankw) Richard Kobrak.jpg Richard Kobrak Waldmannstrasse 1 July 16, 2007 Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Nicolaistr 38 (Lankw) Friederike Lichtenstein.jpg Friederike Lichtenstein Nicolaistrasse 38 June 25, 2015 Friederike Josephsohn was born on March 5, 1871 in Königsberg as the daughter of Aron Josephsohn and Berta, born Rosen, she had a younger sister Martha. On March 13, 1897, Friederike married the cloth merchant Siegfried Lichtenstein, daughter Erna was born in 1898 and son Alfred in 1901. After the First World War the family moved to Berlin, Siegfried Lichtenstein founded the company S.Lichtenstein - Tuche engros. The family lived in a villa in Lankwitz at Nicolaistraße 38. The daughter Erna became a singer; she had married the doctor Arthur Stapf, but had been divorced again in 1934. After the National Socialists came to power, their son Alfred, who was a well-known flautist, and his wife Gerda, who were born students, moved to live with his parents. In March 1938, Friederike's husband Siegfried died, and Friederike had to sell her husband's company to a Munich cloth merchant. Alfred emigrated to Argentina via England with his wife and daughter Sylvia, who was born in 1935. Friederike continued to live with her daughter Erna and her widowed sister Martha Israelski in the villa on Nicolaistrasse, but they were only allowed to have two rooms there, and the rest they probably had to rent out. In the summer of 1941, Friederike Lichtenstein was forced to “sell” the villa to the German Reich, Reich Treasury Aviation. She still had to move to Güntzelstrasse 60, on September 1, 1942, Friederike Lichtenstein was deported from there to Theresienstadt, where she was murdered on September 12, 1942. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Leonorenstr 79 (Lankw) Else Magnus.jpg Else Magnus Leonorenstrasse 79 June 10, 2009 Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Leonorenstr 79 (Lankw) Martin Magnus.jpg Martin Magnus Leonorenstrasse 79 June 10, 2009 Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Barbarastr 14 (Lankw) Erich Panofsky.jpg Erich Panofsky Barbarastrasse 14 19 Sep 2013 Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Barbarastr 14 (Lankw) Lotte Panofsky.jpg Lotte Panofsky Barbarastrasse 14 19 Sep 2013 Erioll world.svg
Stumbling Stone Mozartstrasse 22 (Lankw) Franziska Reis.jpg Franziska Reis Mozartstrasse 22 June 16, 2018 Franziska Kaufmann was born on September 17, 1878 in Bamberg to a Jewish family. She moved to Berlin and married Martin Reis, who had lived at Steglitzer Strasse 81 (today Pohlstrasse) in Schöneberg since 1904 and traded in musical instruments and the like. The children were born: Alice on September 17, 1903 and Hertha on May 19, 1905. From 1907 onwards, Martin Reis ran a shop at Körnerstrasse 17 until he died on August 28, 1924. From 1925, Franziska Reis ran the business from the Steglitzer Strasse apartment: “Deal for musical instruments on a commission basis”. Franziska lived at Steglitzer Straße 81 until 1935. After that, she was not recorded until May 1939, when she lived as a subtenant with Dr. Herbert Epelstein in Neue Königstrasse 42 I with her daughter Hertha and her son Rudolf Alexander Reis, born on December 17, 1930. She moved again to Mozartstrasse 22 in Lankwitz to see Gertrud and Julius Goehr. From there she was deported to Piaski on March 28, 1942, the date of her death is not known. Their daughter Alice had become a nurse and converted to Catholicism, with Dr. Edith Stein was her godmother. Alice, now called Sr. Maria Benedikta, went to a monastery in the Netherlands. On August 2, 1942, SS men took her out of the monastery and took her to the Westerbork assembly camp. From there, Alice Reis was deported to Auschwitz on August 7, 1942, and murdered on September 30, 1942. Nothing could be learned about the fate of her sister Hertha, whose son Rudolf Alexander came to the Baruch-Auerbach orphanage at Schönhauser Allee 162 after his grandmother had been deported in March 1942. He was sent from there on October 19, 1942 Deported with 58 other children from the orphanage to Riga and murdered. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Mozartstr 10 (Lankw) Alice Scherk.jpg Alice Scherk Mozartstrasse 10 March 7, 2009 Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Mozartstr 22 (Lankw) Alexander Selo.jpg Alexander Selo Mozartstrasse 22 June 16, 2018 Alexander Selo was born on March 27, 1881 in Flatow / Prussia as the son of the bookbinder Adolf Selo and his wife Pauline nee Schlochow, widowed Goehr. His mother brought her son Julius (1871) and daughter Valerie (1873) with her from her first marriage; Alexander had the following siblings from the second marriage: Louis (1883), Georg (1885), Willy (1887) and Martha (1889) . Alexander Selo became a bookbinder like his father. At the end of the 19th century the family moved to Berlin-Weißensee. Nothing is known about his further life. In 1939 he lived in Berlin-Lankwitz, Mozartstrasse 22, in a house that was half owned by his half-brother Julius and the other half owned by his business partner Siegmund Dunkel, who had married Alexander Selo's half-sister Valerie. Alexander Selo was arrested as part of the November pogroms in 1938 and imprisoned in Sachsenhausen concentration camp until November 26, 1938. He was deported to Sobibor on June 13, 1942, the date of his death is unknown. A nephew put up a memorial page for him at Yad Vashem. Two of his brothers living in Berlin were also murdered: Willy with his wife Ruth née Sternberg and Louis with his wife Frieda née Bergmann. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Nicolaistr 38 (Lankw) Erna Stapf.jpg Erna Stapf Nicolaistrasse 38 June 25, 2015 Erna Lichtenstein was born on October 15, 1898 in Königsberg as the daughter of the cloth merchant Siegfried Lichtenstein and his wife Friederike née Josephsohn, in 1901 her brother Alfred followed. After the First World War the family moved to Berlin, where Erna's father founded the company S. Lichtenstein - Tuche engros. The family lived in a villa in Lankwitz at Nicolaistraße 38. Erna became a singer and performed under the name Evelyn Sanden, her brother Alfred was a well-known flutist. Erna married the doctor Arthur Stapf in 1930, but was divorced from him again in 1934. Since then she has lived with her parents on Nicolaistrasse. After the National Socialists came to power, their brother Alfred and his wife Gerda also moved in with them, their daughter Sylvia was born in 1934. Her father Siegfried Lichtenstein died in 1937 and his wife had to sell the company he had inherited. Alfred was able to emigrate to Argentina via England with his wife and daughter, and her mother Friederike's widowed sister, Martha Israelski, moved into the house. The three women were only allowed to live in two rooms in the villa. Erna managed to flee to Zagreb via Vienna in 1942, where she lived under a false name and worked in a German military hospital. She is said to have been deported to the Jasenovac concentration camp in the spring of 1945; the date of her death is unknown. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Mozartstrasse 22 (Lankw) Dagobert Weiner.jpg Dagobert Weiner Mozartstrasse 22 June 16, 2018 Dagobert Weiner was born on February 23, 1867 in Odessa to a Jewish family. When he came to Berlin and what work he was doing could not be determined, nor whether he was married or had children. It was not until 1938 that it was entered in the commercial register that he was now the owner of a company called DJ Weiner, “Typewriter Sales Company” with its headquarters at Hindenburgstrasse 87 in Wilmersdorf, the address of Dagobert Weiner. The company's previous owner, David Weiner, was believed to be a relative of his. In 1939 Dagobert Weiner lived in Friedenau, Bachestrasse 1. He had to move again, his last address in Berlin was Mozartstrasse 22 in Lankwitz, where he was subtenant of Gertrud and Julius Goehr. In September 1942 he was taken to the collection point on Große Hamburger Straße and from there on September 25, 1942, deported to Theresienstadt. Finally, on December 18, 1942, he was deported to the Auschwitz extermination camp, where he was murdered at an unknown date. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Teltowkanalstr 5 (Lankw) Elsa Wöllner.jpg Elsa Wöllner Teltowkanalstrasse 5 Apr 26, 2014 Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Waldmannstr 6 (Lankw) Erwin Woythaler.jpg Erwin Woythaler Waldmannstrasse 6 June 16, 2018 Erwin Belmont Woythaler was born on November 11, 1908 in Bromberg as the first child of the factory owner Max Woythaler and his wife Lydia née Liebreich. His sister Ilse was born in 1910. In the early 1920s the family moved to Berlin to set up a branch for his grandfather's snuff factory. From 1927 the family lived in a new building specially designed for them at Waldmannstrasse 6 in Lankwitz, the architect was Hugo Häring . His father was a member of the oldest Berlin history association, the Association for the History of Berlin , and was one of the boards of the liberal Jewish reform community. Erwin worked in his father's business, together they ran the company until 1938, when the factory had to be sold. In the spring of 1939 the family managed to flee to England. Erwin learned how to handle engines there in 1939. In 1941 he married Gerda Bloch. His father died in 1944, his mother much later in 1985, Erwin changed his name to Irvine, and nothing else could be determined about him and his sister Ilse, who was married to an Englishman named Hutchinson. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Waldmannstr 6 (Lankw) Ilse Woythaler.jpg Use Woythaler Waldmannstrasse 6 June 16, 2018 Ilse Woythaler was born on June 25, 1910 in Bromberg as the daughter of the factory owner Max Woythaler and his wife Lydia née Liebreich, she had a brother Erwin Belmont, who was born on November 11, 1908. The family initially lived in Bromberg, in the early 1920s the family moved to Berlin to set up a branch of their grandfather's snuff factory. From 1927 the family lived in a new building specially designed for them at Waldmannstrasse 6 in Lankwitz, the architect was Hugo Häring. Ilse's father was a member of the oldest Berlin history association, the 'Association for the History of Berlin', and was one of the boards of the liberal Jewish reform community. Her brother Erwin worked in his father's business, he and his father continued the company until 1938, when the factory had to be sold. In the spring of 1939 the family managed to flee to England. Ilse worked as an unpaid domestic servant. Her father died there in 1944, her mother much later in 1985, Ilse married an Englishman named Hutchinson, her brother married Gerda Bloch, nothing more could be determined about the lives of the siblings. Erioll world.svg
Stolperstein Waldmannstr 6 (Lankw) Lydia Woythaler.jpg Lydia Woythaler Waldmannstrasse 6 June 16, 2018 Lydia Liebreich was born on July 9, 1888 in Gladbach as the daughter of the factory owner Belmont Liebreich and his wife Rosa, née Rothschild. Her siblings were: Julius (1894), Gertrud (1893) and Margrete (1890). Her brother Julius died in 1902, Lydia married the factory owner Max Woythaler in 1907 and moved with him to Bromberg. Their children were born there: Erwin in 1908 and Ilse in 1910. In the early 1920s the family moved to Berlin, where Max Woythaler owned the branch of his father's snuff factory at Derfflingerstraße 32/34. From 1927 the family lived privately in a single-family house designed especially for them by the architect Hugo Häring at Waldmannstrasse 6 in Lankwitz. The factory had to be sold in 1938 and the family managed to escape to England in 1939. Her husband died there in 1944, Lydia Woythaler died in England in 1985. Her mother, who married the merchant Leopold Simon after her father's death, also lived in Berlin at Rüdesheimer Strasse 1 after his death. She was deported to Theresienstadt on August 25, 1942, the date of her death is unknown. Erioll world.svg
Stumbling stone Waldmannstr 6 (Lankw) Max Woythaler.jpg Max Woythaler Waldmannstrasse 6 June 16, 2018 Max Woythaler was born on February 11, 1875 in Bromberg (Posen) as the son of the factory owner David Woythaler and his wife Flora, née Fabian. He married Lydia Liebreich in Mönchen Gladbach in 1907. She was the daughter of the textile manufacturer Belmont Liebreich and his wife Rosa geb. Rothschild. Max Woythaler worked in the snuff factory founded by his father David Woythaler in Bromberg in 1871. At the end of 1920, Max Woythaler was registered as the owner in the land register for the branch of the Bydgoszcz snuff factory David Woythaler zu Berlin in Steglitz, postal address Derfflingerstraße 32/34. In 1921 the production in Bromberg was given up. Max's mother died in Sopot in 1925, his father in Danzig in 1930. With his wife Lydia and his two children, son Erwin Belmont, who was born in Bromberg on November 11, 1908, and his daughter Ilse, who was also born in Bromberg on June 25, 1910, Max Woythaler moved into a new building in 1927 at Waldmannstrasse 6 in Lankwitz, where he was an architect Hugo Haring. Max Woythaler was a member of the oldest Berlin history association, the 'Association for the History of Berlin', and was one of the boards of the liberal Jewish reform community. Max Woythaler and his son Erwin continued the company until 1938, when the factory had to be sold. In the spring of 1939 the family managed to flee to England. Max Woythaler died there in 1944, his wife died in 1985, his son Erwin, renamed Irvine, and his daughter Ilse, who was married to an Englishman, could not be identified. Erioll world.svg

literature

  • Hildegard Frisius (Ed.): Baptized Evangelically - Persecuted as Jews: Searching for traces of Berlin parishes . Wichern Verlag, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-88981-265-0 , chap. Dreifaltigkeits-Kirchengemeinde Lankwitz .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h 11 stumbling blocks in Steglitz plus 1 in Tiergarten , accessed on November 17, 2018
  2. Israelsky, Martha. Personal extract from the memorial book of the Federal Archives
  3. 19. Osttransport - Transportliste 241. statistik-des-holocaust.de; accessed on December 30, 2018
  4. a b c Biographical compilation by Nina Haeberlin
  5. Charlotte Kobrak (née Stern) biography on stolpersteine-berlin.de
  6. ^ Lichtenstein, Friederike. Personal extract from the memorial book of the Federal Archives
  7. 54. Alterstransport - Transportliste 215. statistik-des-holocaust.de; accessed on December 30, 2018
  8. ^ Reis, Franziska. Personal extract from the memorial book of the Federal Archives
  9. StA Berlin III No. 941/1903 and 531/1905
  10. PWFM Hamans: Edith Stein and Companions: on the way to Auschwitz, Chapter 5
  11. VZ 39
  12. 3.1 Companions of the Passion - Chronology ( Memento from October 24, 2018 in the Internet Archive )
  13. ^ Reis, Rudolf Alexander. Personal extract from the memorial book of the Federal Archives
  14. Selo, Alexander. Personal extract from the memorial book of the Federal Archives
  15. Alex Selo. The Central Database Of Shoah Victims' Names ver. B-110.3
  16. Erna Stapf. lexm.uni-hamburg.de
  17. Weiner, Dagobert. Personal extract from the memorial book of the Federal Archives
  18. StA Mönchengladbach No. 477/1907