List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Lichterfelde
The list of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Lichterfelde contains the stumbling blocks in the Berlin district of Lichterfelde 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 table records a total of 91 stumbling blocks and is partially sortable; the basic sorting is done alphabetically according to the family name.
| image | Surname | Location | Laying date | Life |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Arthur Arnstein | Drakestrasse 47 | Dec 1, 2005 | Arthur Arnstein was born on July 18, 1866, the son of Sigmund and Pauline Arnstein (née Wallenberg) in Berlin. At first living in Charlottenburg, the doctor of medicine worked in Lichterfelde from 1897. He had been married to Ella Sternberg from Pasewalk / Pomerania since September 1897.The couple had two children, Paula (born on June 20, 1898 in Lichterfelde; died on March 31, 1981 in Berlin-Steglitz ) and Vera Ilse Hilda (born on March 16 , 1898 ) February 1905 in Lichterfelde; died there on March 4, 1916; cause of death according to death certificate: accident, extensive burns caused by a clothes fire). His wife Ella died on August 25, 1921 in Lichterfelde, his daughter Paula (married to Fritz Katzenstein, born on October 8, 1891 in Kassel, died on June 14, 1975 in Berlin-Zehlendorf ) was able to emigrate to the USA. From 1902 he ran his own practice at Drakestrasse 47. He became the owner of the house in 1904. In 1915 he was awarded the title of Medical Councilor. Since the National Socialists came to power, the so-called Jewish boycott has made running a doctor's practice increasingly difficult for Jewish citizens. Since 1938 he worked in his practice under the professional title of medical practitioner . On September 11, 1942, he was deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto. He died there on November 3, 1942. The stated cause of death is an intestinal disease. |
|
|
Kurt Aron | Marschnerstrasse 38 | July 16, 2007 | Kurt Samuel Aron was born on April 3, 1894 in Berlin, his mother was Anna Tobia Aron (born Stern on September 23, 1864 in Aachen, murdered on January 20, 1943 in the Theresienstadt concentration camp ). He also had one sister, Lilly Jenny Aron was born in Berlin on March 29, 1889, and had been married to Walter Neckarsulmer (born on September 21, 1884 in Aachen) on January 26, 1912. On August 13, 1942, he was deported to the Auschwitz camp, where he was murdered four months later. Aron was married to Irmgard Aron and had two daughters. |
|
|
Johanna Berg | Baseler Strasse 13 | July 29, 2005 | Johanna Berg was born on April 17, 1861 in Zempelburg , West Prussia (today: Sępólno Krajeńskie , Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship ). Until she was deported, she lived in a teacher's dormitory at Baseler Strasse 13 (then Karlstrasse 113). On July 14, 1942, she was first brought to Theresienstadt and later deported to the Treblinka extermination camp north of Warsaw. The time and circumstances of death are unknown. |
|
|
Edith Braun | Hartmannstrasse 35 | May 15, 2006 | Edith Braun (nee Edith Brach) was born on January 29, 1891 as the daughter of Georg and Marianne Brach in Berlin. She was married to Simon Braun, who was also deported and murdered in 1942. On June 5, 1942 she was first deported to Theresienstadt and on September 9, 1944 to the Auschwitz extermination camp, where she presumably died in November 1944. |
|
|
Ellen Carsch | Limonenstrasse 11 | Oct 5, 2011 | Ellen Carsch (nee Rosenberg) was born on November 4, 1891 in Berlin as the daughter of Louis Rosenberg, who worked in the construction industry, and his wife Martha Ulrike. Her first marriage was the graduate engineer Carl Waldeck. The marriage had three children. Waldeck died in 1924 while on business in Romania. Since then Carsch has lived in Berlin-Lichterfelde again. On January 14, 1941, she married the painter Leopold Carsch. She and her husband were deported to Theresienstadt on March 17, 1943 and taken to Auschwitz on May 18, 1944. She probably died in Auschwitz in 1944, the circumstances of the death are not known. |
|
|
Leopold Carsch | Limonenstrasse 11 | Nov 5, 2011 | Leopold Carsch was born on August 9, 1874 in Essen as the son of the teacher Jacob Carsch and his wife Julie Carsch as one of eleven children. From his first marriage there was a son. The second marriage resulted in two children who were deported to Auschwitz in 1943. The marriage was divorced in 1920. His third marriage resulted in a daughter; the time of the divorce is unknown. In early 1941 he married his fourth wife, Ellen Carsch, with whom he was deported to Theresienstadt on March 17, 1943. He died there twelve days later, the circumstances of the death are not known. |
|
|
Arnold Cohn | Ostpreußendamm 51 | July 7, 2008 | Arnold Cohn was born on February 15, 1874 in Katowice , Silesia (today: Katowice , Silesian Voivodeship ). He was the owner of the house at Berliner Str. 51 / Goethestr. 37 in Lichterfelde-Ost and was deported on January 19, 1942 from Viktoria-Luise-Platz 9 in Schöneberg with the 9th Osttransport from Grunewald train station to the Riga Ghetto in what is now Latvia, where it probably never arrived, as some of the deportees already did She was selected on arrival at Skirotava station on the outskirts of Riga and suffocated in gas vans or taken to the Rumbula forest, where she was shot. |
|
|
Frank Cohn | Drakestrasse 47 | Dec 1, 2005 | Frank Cohn was born on April 29, 1928 as the son of Else Berger (born Breslauer on July 1, 1886 Berlin; died October 7, 1942 in Lichterfelde) and Walter Paul August Berger (born October 29, 1886 Stettin; died 1931 Berlin-Lankwitz ) born in Berlin-Wilmersdorf . Since 1937 he lived with his mother and sister Marlene in Schützenstrasse. 20 in Mariendorf . There he attended the 8th elementary school, today the Johanna-Eck-Schule in Berlin-Tempelhof , and later, after the schooling for Jews was banned until March 31, 1942, the 8th Jewish elementary school. The family from Mariendorf was very likely forced to move to Lichterfelde, their last address was Drakestr. 47, he lived with Arthur Arnstein. His mother Else died there on October 7, 1942 at the age of 66. On March 4, 1943 he was changed from Drakestr. 47 together with his sister (now married Kaplan) and her husband Hans Kaplan deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where he was murdered at an unknown time and under unknown circumstances. |
|
|
Pauline Cohn | Goethestrasse 37 | July 7, 2008 | Pauline Cohn (née Löwe) was born on December 25, 1884 in Usch, Posen (today: Ujście , Greater Poland ). On January 29, 1943 it was moved from Hohenstaufenstr. 50 in Wilmersdorf to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where she was very likely murdered immediately. |
|
|
Fritz Dalen | Hochbergweg 1 | Nov 30, 2012 | Fritz Dalen was born on December 10, 1880 in Bromberg , Posen (today Bydgoszcz , Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship ) to Robert and Gertrud Dalen. He did his doctorate in 1906 at the University of Leipzig and worked as a lawyer and notary. After the National Socialists came to power, he had to resign from his legal work. On March 1, 1941, he committed suicide due to the imminent deportation. He was unmarried.
On November 30, 2012, stumbling blocks were laid for his brothers Kurd Dalen (also in Lichterfelde) and Werner Paul Robert Dalen (in Zossen). |
|
|
Kurd Dalen | Drakestrasse 59 | Nov 30, 2012 | Kurd Dalen was born on December 19, 1884 in Potsdam, the son of Robert and Gertrud Dalen. He passed the Abitur at the Domgymnasium Magdeburg and then studied law. In 1922, after his mother had moved, he became the owner of a house in Berlin-Lichterfelde. The marriage with Margarete Lukszat remained childless. On September 15, 1941, he committed suicide in Munich.
On November 30, 2012, Stolpersteine were laid for his brothers Fritz Dalen (also in Lichterfelde) and Werner Paul Robert Dalen (in Zossen). |
|
|
Max Ebel | Hindenburgdamm 118 | June 16, 2018 | Max Ebel was born on July 18, 1878 in Rixdorf as the son of the shoemaker Franz Ebel and his wife Friederike nee Zorn, he had a brother and a sister. He became a typesetter and went on the “ Walz ” for a few years . During this time he joined the SPD. He married Betty Arlt in Berlin, and two sons were born in 1904 and 1910. Max Ebel was actively involved in the association of Berlin book printers and on the board of the local health insurance fund for the book printing trade. When the Kapp Putsch broke out in the spring of 1920, he played a key role in organizing the newspaper strike against the attempted dictatorship. He lost his job at the General German Trade Union Federation (ADGB) because of its economic situation, and from 1924 took over the business management of outpatient clinics that were supposed to ensure medical care for the workers. Max Ebel was taken into “protective custody” after the “ Day of Potsdam ” (March 21, 1933). He was accused of embezzling a quarter of a million Reichsmarks. From March 30 to April 8, 1933 he was in "protective custody" in Berlin-Plötzensee prison. Two days later, on April 10, 1933, Max Ebel was arrested in front of his place of work at Alexanderplatz and in the SA prison in Papestrasse in the barracks of the " SA Field Police " (from April 26, 1933 part of the "Secret State Police") in the General -Pape-Strasse in Berlin-Schöneberg fixed again. According to a death certificate from the Schöneberg registry office from April 12, 1933, Max Ebel was found dead in the cellar on April 11, 1933. It was alleged that Max Ebel committed suicide. However, according to his sister, who had to identify him, his body was so severely injured that suicide could be ruled out. Max Ebel was buried in the park cemetery in Berlin-Lichterfelde |
|
|
Hans Ellstaetter | Schöppinger Strasse 2 | 22. July 2013 | |
|
|
Susanne Ellstaetter | Schöppinger Strasse 2 | 22. July 2013 | |
|
|
Fritz Elsas | Patschkauer Weg 41 | Nov 30, 2009 | Fritz Elsas was born on July 11, 1890 in Bad Cannstatt to Jewish parents. He studied and earned a doctorate. At the beginning of the First World War he was rejected as a volunteer because of his eye problems. He first worked at the Chamber of Commerce in Stuttgart and in 1915 became director of the city food office. After the First World War he became a member of the DDP and served as city councilor in Stuttgart. In 1931 he was elected mayor of Berlin. When the National Socialists came to power, he took leave of absence. He was in contact with the resistance group around Carl Friedrich Goerdeler and hid him after the assassination attempt on July 20, 1944 . Elsas himself should have become head of the Reich Chancellery after the successful assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler. On August 10, 1944, Elsas was arrested, interrogated and tortured by the Gestapo and held for four months in the Lehrter Strasse cell prison . In December 1944 he was taken to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. He was shot there on January 4, 1945. |
|
|
Georg Johannes Friedrich Epstein | Potsdamer Strasse 32 | Dec 1, 2005 | Georg Epstein was born on March 20, 1874 in Breslau , Province of Silesia (today: Wrocław , Lower Silesian Voivodeship ). The journalist of Jewish origin converted to the Protestant faith in 1901 and was head of the civil cabinet of Prince Leopold zur Lippe from 1912 to 1918 and co-founder of the Prince Leopold Academy for Administrative Sciences in Detmold . In 1915 he was ennobled and from then on called himself von Eppstein . In 1921 he bought the house at Potsdamer Strasse 32 in Berlin-Lichterfelde. After the National Socialists came to power, the reprisals against him began to increase. With the death of his non-Jewish wife Herta in early August 1938, Eppstein also lost the limited opportunities for protection through a " mixed marriage " with a " German-blooded " partner. He was arrested on June 26, 1942 and deported to Theresienstadt on July 2, 1942. He died on September 28, 1942. |
|
|
Albert Friedländer | Finckensteinallee 90 | Apr 26, 2014 | Albert Friedländer was born on September 15, 1869 in Opole , Silesia (today: Opole , Opole Voivodeship ) as the son of the brewery owner Siegfried Friedländer and his wife Ida, née Ring. He had a brother Victor, who probably emigrated to the United States in the 1930s. Albert studied chemistry in Heidelberg and Berlin and received his doctorate. In 1902 he married Gertrud Schüller, the children Jula Therese (1906) and Heinz Siegfried (1908) were born in Berlin. Albert Friedländer fought in World War I and was awarded the Iron Cross, 2nd class. In 1921 the family moved to Nuremberg, where Albert Friedländer worked as the head of the laboratory at the Ludwig Heumann & Co. chemical-pharmaceutical factory. His wife Gertrud died in Nuremberg in 1932, his son Heinz Siegfried emigrated to South Africa in 1936. Albert Friedländer also tried to emigrate there together with his daughter Jula Therese, but this did not succeed because he neither received a payment from his last employer, the Gödecke company, nor the passport applied for. He lived with his daughter Jula Therese and his widowed sister-in-law Elfriede Messow in Lichterfelde, Finckensteinallee 90, until they were deported to Litzmannstadt on October 29, 1941. Albert died in Litzmannstadt on February 20, 1942, the cause of death is noted as “dysentery”. |
|
|
Jula Therese Friedländer | Finckensteinallee 90 | Apr 26, 2014 | Jula Therese Friedländer came to Berlin on January 28, 1906 as the daughter of the chemist Dr. Albert Friedländer and his wife Gertrud nee Schüller, their brother Heinz Siegfried was born in 1908. Her father fought in World War I and received the Iron Cross, 2nd class. In 1921 the family moved to Nuremberg, where Albert Friedländer worked as the head of the laboratory at the Ludwig Heumann & Co. chemical-pharmaceutical factory. Jula's mother Gertrud died in Nuremberg in 1932, her brother Heinz Siegfried emigrated to South Africa in 1936. Albert Friedländer also tried to emigrate there together with Jula Therese, but this did not succeed because he neither received a payment from his last employer, the Gödecke company, nor the passport applied for. In 1939 Albert, Jula Therese Friedländer and their widowed aunt Elfriede Messow lived in Lichterfelde at Finckensteinallee 90. From there they were deported together to Litzmannstadt on October 29, 1941, where their father died. Jula and her aunt had to endure the transport to the Kulmhof extermination camp on May 4, 1942, where both were immediately murdered. |
|
|
Erna Friedländer | Drakestrasse 47 | Dec 1, 2005 | Erna Eva Emma Friedländer was born on April 8, 1902 in Berlin and was the child of Gertrud (born as Wolffenberg on February 9, 1872 in Gollnow, died on March 11, 1941 in Lichterfelde) and Alex Seelig (born on October 12, 1865 in Schwedt, deported to Theresienstadt on September 11, 1942, to the Treblinka extermination camp on September 29, 1942 and murdered there). Her siblings were Siegfried Willy (born June 30, 1898 in Berlin) and Hilde Clara (born April 17, 1906 in Berlin). In 1928 she married Kurt Julius Friedländer in Lichterfelde. In May 1939 she lived with her husband in the house of her father Alex Seelig at Baseler Str. 27 in Lichterfelde. Until she was deported, she was a slave laborer and lived with her husband in the house at Drakestrasse 47. On March 4, 1943, she was deported to the Auschwitz camp, where she died at an unknown date. |
|
|
Kurt Julius Friedländer | Drakestrasse 47 | Dec 1, 2005 | Kurt Julius Friedländer was born on August 14, 1904 in Berlin. He had been married to Erna Friedländer (née Seelig) since 1928. In May 1939 for the census he lived with his wife at Baseler Strasse 27 in Lichterfelde, it was the home of his father-in-law Alex Seelig. Later he was forced to move to Drakestrasse 47. On March 4, 1943, he and his wife were deported to the Auschwitz camp, where he died on December 31, 1943. |
|
|
Arthur Goldstein | Kyllmannstrasse 22 | June 8, 2005 | Arthur Goldstein was born on January 29, 1878 in Cottbus . On March 28, 1942, he and his wife were presumably deported to the Trawniki forced labor camp , where he died in April 1942. |
|
|
Rosa Goldstein | Kyllmannstrasse 22 | June 8, 2005 | Rosa Goldstein was born on November 18, 1880 in Bromberg , Posen Province (today: Bydgoszcz , Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship ). On March 28, 1942, she and her husband were presumably deported to the Trawniki forced labor camp , where she died in April 1942. |
|
|
Kurt Grelling | Koenigsberger Strasse 13 | Sep 7 2009 | Kurt Grelling was born on March 2, 1886 as the son of the author Richard Grelling in Berlin. In 1925 he married his non-Jewish wife Margareta Grelling. In 1937 he fled to the Belgian capital, Brussels. After Belgium was occupied by Germany as part of the western campaign , Grelling was arrested and first taken to the Drancy assembly camp in occupied France. On September 16, 1942, he was deported to the Auschwitz camp, where he died in September 1942. |
|
|
Margareta Grelling | Koenigsberger Strasse 13 | Sep 7 2009 | Margareta Grelling was born in Berlin on January 10, 1898. In 1925, the non-Jewish married the Jewish mathematician and philosopher Kurt Grelling. In 1937 they fled together to the Belgian capital, Brussels. After Belgium was occupied by Germany as part of the western campaign , both were arrested and first brought to the Drancy assembly camp in occupied France. On September 16, 1942, they were deported to the Auschwitz camp. Her husband died in September 1942, the exact time of Margareta Grelling's death is not known. |
|
|
Laura Lea Gruber | Hortensienstrasse 16 | 17 Sep 2019 | |
|
|
Max Habermann | Ostpreußendamm 51 | July 7, 2008 | Max Habermann was born in Hamburg on March 21, 1885 . He was a member of the German National Sales Aid Association , the German Federation of Trade Unions and other organizations. After the National Socialists came to power, his political activities were severely restricted and placed under house arrest. Thereupon he made contact with resistance fighters. After the failed assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on July 20, 1944 , he went into hiding, but was arrested by the Gestapo at the end of October 1944 and taken to a prison in Gifhorn. He committed suicide there on October 30, 1944. |
|
|
Kurt Hansen | Schöppinger Strasse 2 | 22. July 2013 | |
|
|
Berta Heimannsohn | Baseler Strasse 27 | Dec 1, 2005 | Berta Heimannsohn (née Lindemann) was born on December 24, 1893 in Neustadt in West Prussia , West Prussia Province (today: Wejherowo , Pomeranian Voivodeship ). She was married to Julius Heimannsohn, 31 years her senior. On September 14, 1942, she and her husband were deported to the Theresienstadt camp. Her husband died there on October 3, 1942 under unknown circumstances. She was later taken to the Stutthof concentration camp in what is now Sztutowo . She died there on December 24, 1944. |
|
|
Julius Heimannsohn | Baseler Strasse 27 | Dec 1, 2005 | Julius Heimannsohn was born on December 27, 1862 in Pyritz , Pomerania Province (today: Pyrzyce , West Pomeranian Voivodeship ). In 1941 he and his wife Berta Heimannsohn were forcibly committed to the house at Baseler Strasse 27. On September 14, 1942, he and his wife were deported to the Theresienstadt camp. He died there on October 3, 1942. |
|
|
Leonore Heinemann | Hortensienstrasse 9 | May 10, 2011 | Leonore Heinemann was born in Mannheim on May 1, 1892, the daughter of a Jewish bank director and his wife Charlotte. She was not baptized until she was an adult. At the beginning of the First World War she registered with the Red Cross and worked there until 1919. In 1916 she received the Baden War Merit Cross from Friedrich II , Grand Duke of Baden . Between 1919 and 1928 she worked as a secretary to the biologist, educator and author Otto Schmeil . In December 1940 she moved to Berlin. On January 19, 1942, she was deported to Riga. There she died at an unknown time and for unknown causes. |
|
|
Hans Kaplan | Drakestrasse 47 | Dec 1, 2005 | Hans Kaplan was born on January 24, 1920 in Berlin-Spandau. He was a tailor by profession and had been married to Marlene Kaplan since 1941. He lived with her in Berlin-Charlottenburg until both were forcibly committed to the house at Drakestrasse 47. On March 4, 1943, he was deported to the Auschwitz camp. He was murdered on April 3, 1943. His brother Herbert brought an action for redress for him from Los Angeles, California in 1957 under file number 61 WGA 1895-96 / 57, the outcome of the proceedings is unknown. |
|
|
Marlene Kaplan | Drakestrasse 47 | Dec 1, 2005 | Marlene Kaplan (nee Marlene Berger) was born on December 24, 1920 as the daughter of Else Berger (formerly Cohn, nee Breslauer) in Berlin. She had been married to Hans Kaplan since 1941, with whom she lived in Berlin-Charlottenburg until both were forcibly committed to the house at Drakestrasse 47. On March 4, 1943, she was deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp with her husband and brother Frank Cohn. Her husband was murdered on April 3, 1943. Marlene Kaplan's exact date of death is unknown. |
|
|
Betty Johanna Kierski | Kommandantenstrasse 9 | Apr 26, 2014 | Betty Johanna Kierski was born on July 29, 1863 in Belgard an der Persante , Pomerania Province (today: Białogard , West Pomeranian Voivodeship ) as the daughter of the doctor Maximilian Kierski. Her father died in 1882, she looked after her mother until she died in 1904. After working for a short time in Danzig, she moved to Berlin. Since then she has applied for an apartment in the Rother Foundation building on Kommandantenstrasse in Berlin-Lichterfelde. The Rother-Stift was originally supposed to provide accommodation for daughters of officers and civil servants in old age. Kierski lived there until 1938, when Kierski had to leave the foundation's building due to her Jewish origins. After moving, she committed suicide in her new apartment on September 26, 1942 due to the imminent deportation. |
|
|
Marie von Kleist | Weddigenweg 70 | May 10, 2011 | Marie Baronin von Kleist (née Marie Wilhelmine Elise Baronesse von Grotthuss ) was born on March 21, 1874 in Wenden (today's Latvia) as the daughter of Carl Baron von Grotthuss and Auguste von Grotthuss (née von Freymann). She was one of 13 children. On April 10, 1901, she married the lawyer Baron Arthur von Kleist, with whom she had two daughters. Due to the October Revolution in Russia in 1917, the family first fled to Courland and later to Berlin. Her husband died in 1928. Marie von Kleist then moved to a Baltic retirement home. On May 4, 1944, she was admitted to the Wittenau sanatorium. On June 14, 1944, she was admitted to the Obrawalde sanatorium, where she was murdered on June 21, 1944. |
|
|
Madeleine Levin | Gütlingstrasse 6 | June 6, 2019 | |
|
|
Helene Levy | Potsdamer Strasse 62 | Dec 1, 2005 | Helene Levy (née Helene Sochaczewer) was born on September 15, 1878, as the daughter of Isidor Sochaczewer and Pauline Sochaczewer (née Brock) in Berlin. She had a son with her husband, who died early. On January 13, 1942, she was deported to Riga, where she later died. |
|
|
Walter Levy | Potsdamer Strasse 62 | Dec 1, 2005 | Walter Levy was born on June 15, 1917 in Thorn , West Prussia Province (today: Toruń , Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship ) to Heleny Levy and her husband. His father died early. On January 13, 1942, he and his mother were deported to Riga, where he later died. |
|
|
Margarethe Lewinsohn | Potsdamer Strasse 63 | 23 Feb 2019 | |
|
|
Wilhelm Liebenthal | Baseler Strasse 40 | April 30, 2019 | |
|
|
Erna Loewe | Kyllmannstrasse 22 | July 16, 2007 | Erna Loewe (née Schaefer) was born on January 17, 1899 in Berlin. Her husband died early. From 1932 to 1939 she was the owner of the property at Kyllmannstrasse 22. What happened after that is unclear. On January 13, 1942, she was deported to Riga, where she later died. |
|
|
Betty Ludwig | Gardeschützenweg 96 | July 3, 2003 | Betty Ludwig (nee Betty Rosenbaum) was born on May 25, 1873 in Neuchâtel in West Prussia , West Prussia Province (today: Nowe , Kujawien-Pomeranian Voivodeship ) as one of six children, two of whom were deported, two died before the outbreak of war and one emigrated. She was married to Paul Ludwig, with whom she had two daughters who were also deported. On October 3, 1942, she and her husband were deported to the Theresienstadt camp. There she died a few days later on October 14, 1942. |
|
|
Elly Ludwig | Gardeschützenweg 96 | Dec 1, 2005 | Elly Ludwig was born on May 2, 1903 in Gniezno , Province of Posen (today: Gniezno , Greater Poland Voivodeship ) as the daughter of Paul Ludwig and his wife Betty Ludwig as one of two children. Like her sister Luise Ludwig, she was deported to Riga on October 19, 1942, where she later died. |
|
|
Luise Ludwig | Gardeschützenweg 96 | Dec 1, 2005 | Luise Ludwig was born on May 19, 1907 in Gniezno , Province of Posen (today: Gniezno , Greater Poland Voivodeship ) as the daughter of Paul Ludwig and his wife Betty Ludwig as one of two children. Like her sister Elly Ludwig, she was deported to Riga on October 19, 1942, where she later died. |
|
|
Paul Ludwig | Gardeschützenweg 96 | Dec 1, 2005 | Paul Ludwig was born on May 19, 1868 in Gniezno , Province of Posen (today: Gniezno , Greater Poland Voivodeship ). He was married to Betty Ludwig, with whom he had two children who were also deported. Together with his wife he was deported to the Theresienstadt camp on October 3, 1942, where he died on December 7, 1942. |
|
|
Marie Maetzig | Boothstrasse 20C | July 3, 2010 | Marie Maetzig (nee Marie Anna Lyon) was born in Hamburg on August 22, 1881 . She was able to avoid deportation by going into hiding. She was married to Robert Maetzig. Their son Kurt Maetzig , who later became a film director, was born in 1911. On February 9, 1944, she committed suicide in Berlin. |
|
|
Elfriede Messow | Finckensteinallee 90 | June 25, 2015 | Elfriede Messow (nee Elfriede Schüller) was born on December 12, 1872 in Zabrze , Province of Upper Silesia (today: Zabrze , Silesian Voivodeship ) as the daughter of innkeeper Heinrich Schüller and his wife Lina nee Eisner. her sister was called Gertrud and was born on December 28, 1874. Elfriede married the businessman Paul Messow, she lived with her husband in Plauen. Her son Hans Erich was born on May 16, 1902, and died in July 1902. Her sister Gertrud died in Nuremberg in 1932, her husband died in 1939, after which she lived with her brother-in-law, the chemist Dr. Albert Friedländer and his daughter Jula Therese, at Finckensteinallee 90. From there they were deported together on October 29, 1941 to Litzmannstadt. Her brother-in-law died there on February 20, 1942, Elfriede Messow and her niece Jula Therese were taken to the Kulmhof extermination camp on May 4, 1942, where both died. |
|
|
Paul Meyerheim | Curtiusstrasse 108 | July 3, 2010 | Paul Meyerheim was born on January 18, 1896 in Berlin. He was first active in the Central Committee of Jews for Aid and Reconstruction , from which the Reich Representation of German Jews emerged in 1933 . Meyerheim was married and had two sons, nothing is known about the further fate of his family. He was first deported to the Theresienstadt camp on May 19, 1943, to Auschwitz on October 19, 1944, to Dachau on October 27, 1944 and, at an unknown date, to the Flossenbürg concentration camp . He died there on February 6, 1945. |
|
|
Agnes Michaelis | Kadettenweg 39 | 4th June 2019 | |
|
|
Sara Michaelis | Drakestrasse 47 | Dec 1, 2005 | Sara Michaelis (née Sara Frankenstein) was born on February 22nd, 1871 in Flatow , West Prussia Province (today: Złotów , Greater Poland Voivodeship ). She may have worked for the doctor who was deported with her, Dr. Arthur Arnstein. On September 10, 1942, she was deported to Theresienstadt. She died there on October 9, 1942. |
|
|
Mathilde Moeller | Potsdamer Strasse 62 | Dec 1, 2005 | Mathilde Moeller was born in Danzig on March 21, 1890 . She lived with her sister Thekla Moeller. On January 25, 1942, she and her sister were deported to Riga. |
|
|
Thekla Moeller | Potsdamer Strasse 62 | Dec 1, 2005 | Thekla Moeller was born in Danzig on December 28, 1878 . She lived with her sister Mathilde Moeller. On January 25, 1942, she and her sister were deported to Riga. |
|
|
Otto Ludwig Martin Morgenstern | Söhtstrasse 2 | Dec 1, 2005 | Otto Ludwig Martin Morgenstern was born on February 2nd, 1860 in Magdeburg. He studied Latin, Greek, Hebrew, German, history and Protestant theology. From 1888 to 1925 he worked at the Schiller High School in Lichterfelde. From 1920 to 1930 he was a district councilor in Steglitz. On July 8, 1942, he was deported to Theresienstadt. He died there on November 28, 1942. |
|
|
Wilhelm Nowak | Wismarer Strasse 18A | May 8, 2006 | Wilhelm Nowak was born on January 23, 1922 in Weisdin to Polish parents. On March 8, 1940, he was deported to the Lichterfelde satellite camp of Sachsenhausen concentration camp. The reason for this is not known. On June 10, 1944, he and another prisoner managed to escape. As part of a search for a shot down British pilot, Nowak was discovered a few days later near Cottbus. He was sentenced to death by the gallows for allegedly injuring a police officer with a knife during his arrest. First he was taken to Sachsenhausen concentration camp, and on August 22, 1944, he was taken to the Lichterfelde satellite camp. Towards evening Nowak was hanged on the roll call square in the presence of other prisoners under the orders of August Höhn . |
|
|
Ernst Perels | Weddigenweg 64 | May 10, 2011 | Ernst Perels was born on August 2, 1882 in Berlin as the son of the Jewish Ferdinand Perels and his wife Anna Maria Luise. From 1911 to 1935 Ernst Perels taught medieval history at the Friedrich Wilhelm University (today: Humboldt University ) in Berlin. He was later retired due to his Jewish origins. He was married to Gertrud Margarete Antonie, with whom he had four children. The second eldest son of Friedrich Justus Perels was arrested as a co-conspirator in the assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on July 20, 1944 and sentenced to death. Ernst Perels was then taken into kin custody. He was first brought to Moabit, later to Buchenwald and from there to Flossenbürg, where he died on May 10, 1945 as a result of his imprisonment. |
|
|
Friedrich Justus Perels | Viktoriastraße 4a | March 7, 2009 | Friedrich Justus Perels was born on November 3, 1910 in Berlin as the son of Ernst Perels and his wife Gertrud Margarete Antonie. On April 1, 1933, he began his legal clerkship , which he completed in 1936. Shortly afterwards he became a legal advisor in a church institution. He thus succeeded Friedrich Weißler , who was previously brought to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp and murdered there. He also headed an office of the Confessing Church in Berlin-Lichterfelde. In 1940 he married his wife, with whom he had a child, Joachim Perels . Perels was involved in company seven, through which 14 people were able to flee abroad. After the assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on July 20, 1944, Perels was arrested as a co-conspirator and sentenced to death. On April 23, 1945, he was murdered on Lehrter Strasse in Berlin. His father, Ernst Perels was in guilt by association taken. He was first brought to Moabit, later to Buchenwald and from there to Flossenbürg, where he died on May 10, 1945 as a result of his imprisonment. |
|
|
Margarete Anna Prager | Ringstrasse 102D | Dec 1, 2005 | Anna Margarete Lucie Prager was born in Berlin on January 14, 1890, her father was the bookseller Robert Louis (later Ludwig) Prager (born August 10, 1844 and died December 30, 1918 in Berlin) and her mother Martha Prager (born List on December 14, 1860 in Brandenburg an der Havel). Her parents married on January 23, 1886 at the Schöneberg I registry office, her sister Gertrud Franziska Louise was born on October 27, 1886 and her brother Werner Ludwig Julius Siegfried on May 20, 1888. At the time, the family lived at Lüneburger Strasse 5 in Moabit, and Robert Prager's bookstore was at Universitätsstrasse. 5 in the middle. Martha Prager later became the owner of the house in Ringstrasse 102d, where she lived with Margarete and Gertrud. Gertrud married on June 1, 1939 in Elsinore in Denmark. Margarete was a stenographer and most recently worked as a forced laborer in a Siemens-Halske factory. On March 1, 1943, she was deported to Auschwitz, where she later died. In May 1946 her sister Gertrud Lundblad from Denmark made a query about her through the military mission, which was answered in January 1947 with information about her deportation. In 1950 she managed her sister Margarete's home furnishings and the Ringstr. 102d several actions for redress. |
|
|
Robert Remak | Manteuffelstrasse 22a | Sep 7 2009 | Robert Remak was born on February 14, 1888 in Berlin as one of four children of the neurologist Ernst Julius Remak and his wife Marta Remak. He studied at what is now the Humboldt University in Berlin . He later worked there as a private lecturer. After the National Socialists came to power, he lost his job. He was arrested in 1938 and deported to Sachsenhausen. After his release, he emigrated to the Netherlands, where he was arrested again after the German occupation and deported to Auschwitz in 1942. He died there in November 1942. |
|
|
Adolf Rewald | Augustastrasse 37 | May 15, 2006 | Adolf Rewald was born on February 19, 1867 in Bartin , Pomerania Province (today: Barcino , Pomeranian Voivodeship ). He was married to Tillie Rewald, with whom he had two children. On June 12, 1942, he and his wife were deported to Theresienstadt via the Grosse Hamburger Strasse assembly camp. He died there on September 7, 1942. His wife died a month earlier. |
|
|
Edwin Rewald | Augustastrasse 37 | May 15, 2006 | Edwin Rewald was born on July 31, 1897 as the son of Adolf and Tillie Rewald in Berlin. Nothing is known about possible participation in the war. His first marriage had two children. Shortly after the divorce in the late 1920s, the woman emigrated with the children to South America. In 1932 he married his second wife, with whom he had another child. He later worked as a forced laborer, but could not decide to emigrate despite the imminent deportation. He first hid in his in-laws' house, but was tracked down and was deported to Auschwitz. He died there on January 8, 1944. |
|
|
Tillie Rewald | Augustastrasse 37 | May 15, 2006 | Tillie Rewald (nee Tillie Herrmann) was born on January 21, 1868 in New York. She was married to Adolf Rewald, with whom she had a son, Edwin Rewald. On June 12, 1942, she and her husband were deported to Theresienstadt via the Grosse Hamburger Strasse assembly camp. She died there on August 25, 1942. |
|
|
Betty Riehn | Kadettenweg 10 | 4th June 2019 | |
|
|
Martha Rosenberg | Limonenstrasse 11 | May 10, 2011 | Martha Rosenberg (nee Martha Ulrike Caro) was born on June 16, 1867 in Berlin. She was married to Louis Rosenberg, who worked in construction, who died in 1924. She had two daughters. One daughter died in Auschwitz in 1944, the other survived. On September 1, 1942, she was deported to Theresienstadt. She died there on September 21, 1942. |
|
|
Anna Ruhemann | Potsdamer Strasse 63 | 23 Feb 2019 | |
|
|
Beate Schlumberger | Heimkehlenstrasse 6 | June 25, 2015 | Beate Schlumberger was born on November 8, 1923 in Berlin as the daughter of Ernst and Käthe Schlumberger. She first fled to Switzerland, but returned a little later. Due to the imminent deportation, she and her parents committed suicide on May 15, 1943 in Berlin. |
|
|
Ernst Schlumberger | Heimkehlenstrasse 6 | June 25, 2015 | Ernst Schlumberger was born on September 17, 1887 in Lindau . He studied at the Technical University in Karlsruhe . He was married to Käthe Schlumberger, with whom he had a daughter. On May 15, 1943, he, his wife and daughter took their own lives as a result of the imminent deportation. |
|
|
Kathe Schlumberger | Heimkehlenstrasse 6 | June 25, 2015 | Käthe Schlumberger (nee Käthe Zehden) was born on May 2, 1896 in Stettin , Pomerania Province (today: Szczecin , West Pomeranian Voivodeship ). She was married to Ernst Schlumberger, with whom she had a daughter, Beate Schlumberger. On May 15, 1943, she, her husband and her daughter committed suicide due to the imminent deportation. |
|
|
Alice Schönhof | Drakestrasse 58 | July 29, 2005 | Alice Schönhof was born on March 19, 1885 in Offenbach am Main as the daughter of Salomon Schönhof and his wife Emilie. She was first deported to Theresienstadt and later to the Sobibor extermination camp . There she died at an unknown time. |
|
|
Hugo Schönfeld | Baseler Strasse 27 | Dec 1, 2005 | Hugo Schönfeld was born on May 28, 1876 in the Rosenfelde district in the Deutsch Krone district (today: Powiat Wałecki ). He received his license to practice medicine in 1901 and opened a practice. He took part in the First World War. Over the years he has worked in different locations. He was married to Frieda Schönfeld. Later they were probably forcibly taken to the house at Baseler Strasse 27. On October 3, 1942, he was deported to Theresienstadt. He died after the end of the war on July 17, 1945 as a result of imprisonment. |
|
|
Ruth Seefeldt | Schillerstrasse 10A | 25 Sep 2006 | Ruth Seefeldt was born on May 15, 1904 in Alt-Kolzigow , Pomerania Province (today: Kołczygłowy , Pomeranian Voivodeship ) as the daughter of Hertha Seefeldt. In 1939 she and her sister inherited an apartment that previously belonged to her mother. Her sister emigrated in 1939 and Ruth Seefeldt took care of the children. On March 3, 1943, she was deported to Auschwitz, where she later died. |
|
|
Alex Seelig | Baseler Strasse 27 | Dec 1, 2005 | Alex Seelig was born on October 12, 1865 in Schwedt an der Oder . From 1918 he was the owner of the house at Baseler Straße 27. (Until 1934: Karlstraße 110) He was married to Gertrud Seelig (born Wolffenberg on February 9, 1872 in Gollnow, died on March 11, 1941 in Lichterfelde), with the he had three children (Siegfried Willy born in 1898, Erna Eva Emma born in 1902 and Hilde Clara born in 1906). Several sub-tenants lived in his house and since the Nazis came to power, Jews have been relocated to his house before they were deported. Alex Seelig was deported to Theresienstadt on September 11, 1942 and then to the Treblinka extermination camp on September 29, 1942 . There he died at an unknown time. His two children Willy Seelig and Hilde Wahl (married to Fritz Wahl since 1930, born on June 25, 1895 in Berlin, died on November 29, 1943 in the Ferramonti di Tarsia internment camp ) survived the Holocaust by fleeing abroad in good time Emigrated to China in May 1940. In 1950 and 1955, both brought several lawsuits from Israel for redress for the stolen property and property at Baseler Strasse 27 of their father Alex Seelig. |
|
|
Ruth Seelig | Baseler Strasse 18 | April 30, 2019 | |
|
|
Clara Silbermann | Hortensienstrasse 9 | Oct 5, 2011 | Clara Margarete Silbermann (there are also other sources with the spelling Klara ) was born on December 11, 1885 in Steinau , Province of Silesia (today: Ścinawa , Lower Silesian Voivodeship ). She lived with her sister Gertrud Silbermann at Hortensienstraße 9 in Lichterfelde. On January 19, 1942, they were deported together to Riga, where they both died. |
|
|
Gertrud Silbermann | Hortensienstrasse 9 | Oct 5, 2011 | Gertrud Berta Silbermann was born on December 12, 1887 in Steinau , Province of Silesia (today: Ścinawa , Lower Silesian Voivodeship ). She lived with her sister Clara Silbermann at Hortensienstraße 9 in Lichterfelde. On January 19, 1942, they were deported together to Riga, where they both died. |
|
|
Berthold Silberstein | Gardeschützenweg 51 | July 3, 2010 | Berthold Silberstein was born on July 16, 1885 in the province of Silesia , the son of an innkeeper. He was married to his wife Käthe, with whom he had two children. They later emigrated to New Zealand. The fate of the children was promised in the book New Zealand. Escape to the end of the world from Freya Klier . Silberstein was a soldier at the front during the First World War. He later owned the Boga department store. The department store was destroyed in the November pogroms in 1938 . As of October 1942, his family was relocated to another house and he and his wife have had to do forced labor ever since. On March 17, 1943, he and his wife were deported to Theresienstadt and on October 12, 1944 to Auschwitz. Both died there at an unknown time. |
|
|
Käthe Silberstein | Gardeschützenweg 51 | July 3, 2010 | Käthe Silberstein (nee Käthe Wolff) was born on January 28, 1893 in the province of West Prussia . She was married to the department store owner Berthold Silberstein, with whom she had two children. They later emigrated to New Zealand. The fate of the children was promised in the book New Zealand. Escape to the end of the world from Freya Klier . Her husband's department store, the Boga department store near the Botanical Gardens in Berlin, was destroyed during the November pogroms in 1938 . In October 1942, she and her family were relocated to another house and have been subjected to forced labor ever since. She then worked as a solderer in a cable factory. In March 1943 they were deported together to Theresienstadt and on October 12, 1944 to Auschwitz. Both died there at an unknown time. |
|
|
Hedwig Simon | Hindenburgdamm 11 | Oct 16, 2014 | Hedwig Simon (nee Hedwig Stettiner) was born on October 17, 1861 in Berlin. Her brother was Richard Stettiner , who worked as an art historian at the University of Hamburg . Simon was married to Herman Veit Simon, a lawyer. They had four children together. Her husband died on July 16, 1914 while taking a spa stay in Switzerland. Since the Nazis came to power, Simon has repeatedly been forced to move. In the end she was deported from Hindenburgdamm 11 on October 3, 1942 to Theresienstadt, where she died on April 1, 1943. |
|
|
Ernst Springer | Boothstrasse 33 | June 10, 2009 | Ernst Gotthelf Springer was born on September 24, 1860 in Berlin as the son of the publisher Julius Springer and his wife Marie Springer. At first he worked as an independent lawyer. Later he worked in the Reich debt administration. In 1890 he married Gertrud Müller. She died in 1914 and was buried in the cemetery in Lichterfelde. After the National Socialists came to power, he lost his position in 1935. On March 5, 1943, he was briefly arrested by the Gestapo for unexplained reasons. On August 24, 1943, his house on Boothstrasse was destroyed in an air raid. Springer survived in the air raid shelter of his neighbor Manfred von Ardenne . After that he lived in the house of his daughter and her husband. He was supposed to be deported on January 9, 1944, but his relatives were able to prevent this due to his illness. On January 19, 1944, the Gestapo took him to the Jewish Hospital in an ambulance , which at that time was used as an "interim camp" until he was deported. On March 10, 1944, he was brought to Theresienstadt. On June 2, 1944, he died there under unknown circumstances. |
|
|
Martha Stein | Baseler Strasse 13 | July 29, 2005 | Martha Stein (nee Martha Brilles) was born on July 2, 1861 in Treptow , Pomerania Province (today: Trzebiatów , West Pomeranian Voivodeship ). She was a teacher and lived in the Israelite teachers' residence at Karlstrasse 112a (today: Baseler Strasse 13). At the time of National Socialism, the house became a kind of "collection point" for resettled people with imminent deportation. Shortly before their deportation, Stein moved to a Jewish home for the blind and deaf-mute in Berlin-Weißensee. From there she was first deported to the Große Hamburger Straße assembly camp and from there to Theresienstadt on September 8, 1942, and to Treblinka on September 29, 1942. There she died at an unknown time. |
|
|
Paula Tausk | Drakestrasse 19 | Dec 1, 2005 | Paula Tausk was born on August 26, 1875 in Murowana Goslin , Poznan Province (from 1943 to 1945: Goslin , today: Murowana Goślina , Greater Poland Voivodeship ). She was deported to Theresienstadt on March 17, 1943 via the assembly camp on Grosse Hamburger Strasse . She died there in September 1943. |
|
|
Ludwig Theomin | Gardeschützenweg 139 | May 10, 2011 | Ludwig Theomin was born on November 28, 1876 in Fraustadt , Posen Province (today: Wschowa , Lebus Voivodeship ) as the son of Fanny Theomin. He worked in a bookstore that moved to Berlin in 1917. He stayed there until 1928. From 1925 to 1931 he lived at Kyllmannstrasse 10 in Berlin-Lichterfelde, after which he lived at Gardeschützenweg 139. He was married to Julinka Seiffert, with whom he had a son. On May 4, 1944, he was deported to Theresienstadt. He survived captivity. |
|
|
Etta Ottilie Veit Simon | Hindenburgdamm 11 | Oct 16, 2014 | Etta Ottilie Veit Simon was born on August 29, 1918 in Berlin as the daughter of the Jewish lawyer Dr. Heinrich Veit Simon and his wife Irmgard, née Gabriel, were born. She had five siblings: Harro Herman (born 1911), Ruth Agnes (born 1914), Ulla Phillipine (born 1915), Rolf Gabriel (born 1916), and Judith Leonore (born 1925). The family lived on Hindenburgdamm 11. Etta Ottilie, like her sister Ruth Agnes, had an artistic talent. But she and her sister Ruth Agnes had to do forced labor at Zeiss-Ikon in Lichterfelde. She was arrested along with her sister Ruth Agnes because she was planning to try to escape using forged papers. Her father Heinrich Veit Simon died in police custody on May 18, 1942, according to the memories of the prison pastor Harald Poelchau, because he was held responsible for the attempt to escape. On July 7, 1942, Ruth Agnes and Etta Ottilie were deported to Theresienstadt on the 16th transport. Ruth Agnes died there on July 26, 1943, Etta Ottilie survived; she is said to have been involved in the theater group in Theresienstadt. Her brother Rolf was arrested in Holland, where he had fled to, brought to Auschwitz and murdered there. The siblings Harro, Ulla and Judith were able to emigrate in time. After the end of the Second World War, Etta went to the USA, where her sister Judith also lived. Etta married, had a daughter and had two stepchildren. She died very old in Seattle. |
|
|
Heinrich Veit Simon | Hindenburgdamm 11 | Oct 16, 2014 | Heinrich Veit Simon came as the son of the Justice Council Dr. Herman Veit Simon and his wife Hedwig, born in Stettin, were born on August 1, 1883 in Berlin. He had three younger siblings: Eva (born 1884), Katharina (born 1887) and Martin (born 1890); the two sisters were deaf and dumb. Heinrich Veit Simon married the daughter of one of his father's college friends, Irmgard née Gabriel. The marriage had six children: Harro Hermann (born 1911), Ruth Agnes (born 1914), Ulla Phillipine (born 1915), Rolf Gabriel (born 1916), Etta Ottilie (born 1918) and Judith Leonore (born 1925). Heinrich Veit Simon had fought in the First World War, studied law, received his doctorate and worked as a lawyer in his law firm at Pariser Platz 6. Since 1919 he worked for the University for the Science of Judaism, first on the board of trustees, then as treasurer and off 1930 as chairman. His grandfather, Dr. Karl Berthold Simon was one of the co-founders of the university; his father had been chairman of the board of trustees since 1906. Heinrich Veit Simon was able to practice the profession of lawyer as a "frontline fighter" until 1938; after that he was only allowed to represent Jews as a “ consultant ”. Presumably as part of the November pogroms, he was arrested and held in Sachsenhausen concentration camp; on December 2, 1938, he was released. His children Harro and Ulla were still able to emigrate; his son Rolf fled to the Netherlands, but was deported with his wife Sabine to Auschwitz after the invasion of the Wehrmacht and murdered. The youngest daughter, Judith, arrived in England on a Kindertransport. Ruth and Etta were supposed to leave with false papers. However, they were denounced and arrested, their father Heinrich Veit Simon was also arrested and killed by the Gestapo on May 18, 1942. After a while, his wife received notification of his death that she could pick up her husband in the coffin, but was not allowed to open the coffin. Hedwig Veit Simon opened the coffin anyway and found her husband with a smashed face. He was buried in a cemetery in Wilmersdorf. |
|
|
Ruth Agnes Veit Simon | Hindenburgdamm 11 | Oct 16, 2014 | Ruth Agnes Veit Simon was born on January 3, 1914 in Berlin as the daughter of the Jewish lawyer and notary Heinrich Veit Simon and his non-Jewish wife Irmgard, née Gabriel. Ruth had five siblings: Harro Herman (born 1911), Ulla Phillipine (born 1915), Rolf Gabriel (born 1916), Etta Ottilie (born 1918) and Judith Leonore (born 1925). Ruth attended the Auguste-Viktoria-Schule (the later Fichtenberg-Gymnasium ) and passed the Abitur in 1932. The family lived at 11 Hindenburgdamm in Lichterfelde. Ruth was artistically gifted: she illustrated a children's book in the mid-1930s. From 1938 onwards, her father was only able to represent Jewish clients as "consultants". Ruth and some family members did forced labor at Zeiss-Ikon in Zehlendorf. Her father, Heinrich Veit Simon, died in police custody on May 18, 1942, according to the memories of the prison pastor Harald Poelchau; one of his daughters' attempts to escape with false papers had failed and he was held responsible for it. On July 7, 1942, Ruth Agnes and Etta Ottilie were deported to Theresienstadt via the assembly camp at Große Hamburger Straße 26. Her grandmother Hedwig Simon and her aunts Eva and Katharina Simon, who had lived on Gelfertstrasse in Dahlem, followed them to Theresienstadt a short time later. Ruth Veit Simon died on July 26, 1943 in Theresienstadt. She was 29 years old. Her sister Etta survived Theresienstadt. An older stumbling block for Ruth Veit Simon was moved to Rothenburgstrasse 18 in Steglitz. |
|
|
Ella Weinberg | Drakestrasse 53 | July 29, 2005 | Ella Weinberg was born on November 25, 1888 in Berlin, the daughter of Simon and Mathilde Weinberg. She was single, worked as a typist and secretary and had probably lived at 53 Drakestrasse since 1914. On January 19, 1942, she was deported to Riga, where she later died. |
|
|
Josef Wirmer | Dürerstrasse 17 | July 16, 2007 | Josef Wirmer was born on March 19, 1901 in Paderborn as the son of the teacher Anton Wirmer. He was one of six children. After graduating from high school, he studied law . He was an opponent of Hitler and had contact with resistance groups. Since 1944 he was also in contact with Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg . After the failed assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on July 20, 1944 , he was arrested on August 4, 1944 and sentenced to death. The death sentence was carried out on September 8, 1944. Wirmer designed the so-called Wirmer flag , which, according to his idea, should become the new national flag of Germany after a successful assassination attempt against Hitler and the seizure of power by the conspirators. |
|
|
Arthur Zerkowski | Rotdornweg 14 | July 16, 2007 | Arthur Zerkowski was born on September 9, 1878 in Breslau , Province of Silesia (today: Wrocław , Lower Silesian Voivodeship ). He was married to Gretchen Zerkowski. From 1912 to 1914 he worked in a uniform tailor's shop, after which he opened his own tailor's shop. At an unknown point in time, Zerkowski was arrested for the first time and taken to Sachsenhausen. In November 1938, however, he was released again. The couple later lived in their house at Rotdornweg 14. On March 29, 1942, they were deported together to Piaski, where they later died. |
|
|
Gretchen Zerkowski | Rotdornweg 14 | July 16, 2007 | Gretchen Zerkowski (nee Grethe Cussel) was born on September 9, 1887 in Celle as the daughter of the textile manufacturers Julius and Agnes Cussel as one of five children. She was married to the tailor Arthur Zerkowski. The couple later lived in their house at Rotdornweg 14 in Berlin-Lichterfelde. On March 29, 1942 they were deported together to Piaski, where they later died. |
|
|
Ethel Yvonne Zobel | Schillerstrasse 10A | 25 Sep 2006 | Ethel Yvonne Zobel was born on August 21, 1927 in Berlin as the daughter of Fritz and Margarete Gabriele Zobel as one of two daughters. She and her family were deported to Auschwitz on March 3, 1943, where she died at an unknown date. |
|
|
Fritz Zobel | Schillerstrasse 10A | 25 Sep 2006 | Fritz Zobel was born on October 15, 1895 in Breslau , Province of Silesia (today: Wrocław , Lower Silesian Voivodeship ) as the son of Leo and Else Zobel. He was married to Margarete Gabriele Zobel, with whom he had two daughters, Marion and Ethel. Together with his wife and daughters, he was deported to Auschwitz on March 3, 1943, where he died at an unknown date. |
|
|
Margarete Gabriele Zobel | Schillerstrasse 10A | 25 Sep 2006 | Margarete Gabriele Zobel (nee Margarete Gabriele Adam) was born on September 1, 1898 in Berlin. She was married to Fritz Zobel, with whom she had two daughters, Marion and Ethel. Together with her husband and daughters, she was deported to Auschwitz on March 3, 1943, where she died at an unknown date. |
|
|
Marion Zobel | Schillerstrasse 10A | 25 Sep 2006 | Marion Zobel was born on December 30, 1930 in Berlin as the daughter of Fritz and Margarete Gabriele Zobel, one of two daughters. She and her family were deported to Auschwitz on March 3, 1943, where she died at an unknown date. |
Web links
Commons : Stolpersteine in Berlin-Lichterfelde - Collection of images
- Stolpersteine project in the Evangelical Church District Teltow-Zehlendorf
Individual evidence
- ↑ obituary Ilschen Arnstein on 9 March 1916 at the Berliner Tageblatt
- ^ Arnstein, Arthur in: Jüdische Ärzte als Krankenbehandler: in Berlin between 1938 and 1945 , 2018, Mabuse-Verlag, ISBN 3-86321-322-X
- ↑ Appointment of Berlin doctors to medical councilors on February 22, 1915 in the Berliner Tageblatt
- ↑ Dr. Arthur Arnstein in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Aron, Anna Tobia in the memorial book on bundesarchiv.de
- ^ Kurt Aron in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ^ Johanna Berg in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Edith Braun in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Ellen Carsch in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ^ Leopold Carsch in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Arnold Cohn in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Transport list statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ^ Transport 9 from Berlin to Riga, Latvia on 01/19/1942 yadvashem.org
- ^ Index card Reich Association of Jews Source: ITS Bad Arolsen
- ↑ Schützenstrasse 20 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1937, part.
- ↑ Card index of the Reich Association of Jews. ITS Bad Arolsen
- ↑ Card index of the Reich Association of Jews. ITS Bad Arolsen
- ↑ Transport list statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ^ Frank Cohn in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ↑ Transport list statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ^ Pauline Cohn in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Dr. Friedrich (Fritz) Dalen in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ a b Stolperstein laid for Werner Robert Dalen
- ↑ a b Stumbling stone laying for Kurt Dalen on November 30th in Hochbergstrasse 1 ( Memento from April 12th 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
- ↑ Dr. Kurd Dalen in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ kirchenkreis-steglitz.de
- ^ Fritz Elsas in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Dr. Georg Johannes Friedrich von Eppstein in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ↑ statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ^ Biographical compilation by Initiative Steglitz
- ↑ Dr. Albert Friedländer in the database of stumbling blocks in Berlin
- ↑ bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ↑ statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ^ Biographical compilation by Initiative Steglitz
- ^ Jula Therese Friedländer in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Seelig, Gertrud index card Reich Association of Jews
- ↑ Seelig, Alex in the memorial book on bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ Erna Friedländer née Seelig on mappingthelives.org
- ↑ Erna Friedländer in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Kurt Friedländer on mappingthelives.org
- ^ Kurt Julius Friedländer in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Arthur Goldstein in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Rosa Goldstein in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Kurt Grelling in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ↑ Margareta Grelling in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ^ Max Habermann in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ^ Berta Heimannsohn in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Julius Heimannsohn in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Leonore Heinemann in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Hans Kaplan in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ WGA database wga-datenbank.de
- ↑ Transport list statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ↑ Marlene Kaplan in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Betty Johanna Kierski in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Marie Baronin von Kleist (née Grotthuss, Baronesse von) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Helene Levy (née Sochaczewer) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Walter Levy in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Erna Loewe in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Betty Ludwig (nee Rosenbaum) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Elly Ludwig in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Luise Ludwig in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Paul Ludwig in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Marie Anna Maetzig (née Lyon) in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ↑ bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ↑ statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ^ Elfriede Messow (née Schüller) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Paul Meyerheim in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Sara Michaelis in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Mathilde Moeller in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ^ Thekla Moeller in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Otto Ludwig Martin Morgenstern in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Wilhelm Nowak in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Prof. Dr. Ernst Perels in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Friedrich Justus Perels in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Universitätsstrasse 5 . In: Berlin address book , 1886, part.
- ^ Margarete Prager in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Query about PRAGER MARGARET 01/14/1890 on arolsen-archives.org
- ↑ WGA database file number and a. 8 WGA 2376/50 and 8 WGA 2369/50
- ^ Robert Remak in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Adolf Rewald in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Edwin Rewald in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Tillie Rewald (née Herrmann) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Martha Ulrike Rosenberg (nee Caro) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Beate Schlumberger in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Dr. Ernst Schlumberger in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Käthe Schlumberger (née Zehden) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Alice Schönhof in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Dr. Hugo Schönfeld in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Ruth Seefeldt in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Transport list 62. Age transport on statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ↑ Alex Seelig in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Wahl, Fritz in the memorial book on bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ Hilde Wahl née Seelig on mappingthelives.org
- ↑ Klara Margarete Silbermann in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Gertrud Berta Silbermann in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ a b Berthold Silberstein in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Käthe Silberstein (née Wolff) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Hedwig Simon (nee Stettiner) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Ernst Gotthelf Springer in the Stolpersteine database in Berlin
- ↑ Martha Stein (née Brilles) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Paula Tausk in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Ludwig Theomin in the database of stumbling blocks in Berlin
- ^ Biographical compilation of Initiative Steglitz based on information provided by a nephew, Mr. John Veit-Wilson
- ↑ Etta Ottilie Veit Simon in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ Simon, Heinrich. Index card Reich Association of Jews
- ^ Biographical compilation of Initiative Steglitz based on information provided by a grandson, Mr. John Veit-Wilson
- ↑ Dr. Heinrich Veit Simon in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ bundesarchiv.de
- ↑ statistik-des-holocaust.de
- ↑ Ruth Agnes Simon in the victim database on holocaust.cz
- ^ Biographical compilation by Initiative Steglitz, Fichtenberg-Oberschule and based on information from a nephew, Mr. John Veit-Wilson
- ↑ Ruth Agnes Veit Simon in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Ella Weinberg in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Josef Wirmer in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Arthur Zerkowski in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Gretchen Zerkowski (née Cussel) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ↑ Ethel Yvonne Zobel in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Fritz Zobel in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Margarete Gabriele Zobel (née Adam) in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin
- ^ Marion Zobel in the database of Stolpersteine in Berlin