List of stumbling blocks in Hagenow

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The list of stumbling blocks in Hagenow contains all of the stumbling blocks that were laid by Gunter Demnig in Hagenow as part of the project of the same name . They are intended to commemorate the victims of National Socialism who lived and worked in Hagenow. There have been two relocation dates since 2009, during which a total of 15 stumbling blocks were relocated to three addresses.

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Laying stumbling blocks

address Laying date Person, inscription image annotation
Long Street 108
World icon
July 25, 2009 Here lived
SAMUEL OPINIONS
Vol. 1867
'protective custody' in 1935
arrested in 1936
for 'treachery'
prison Hagenow
dead to Follow
25/11/1937
Samuel Opinions was born on September 15, 1867 and was the community leader of the Jewish community in Hagenow. In 1933 he set up a hachshara school, which he was able to run until 1935. In 1936 he was arrested. He died on November 25, 1937 and was the last person to be buried in the Jewish cemetery in Hagenow. His tombstone has been in front of the Old Synagogue since 2010 after he was found during clearing work on the former cemetery.

HERMANN MEINUNGEN,
born in 1900, lived here,
arrested several times,
deported July 10, 1942,
Auschwitz,
Hildesheim concentration
camp,
dead 1942
Hermann Opinions was born on September 14, 1900 as the son of Samuel Opinion in Hagenow. From 1933 to 1935 he and his father ran a landscape school to prepare young Jews for emigration to Palestine, for which the Jewish Community in Berlin awarded him a medal in 1935. He was arrested in the November pogroms of 1938 and remained in prison in Alt-Strelitz until December 2, 1938 . On 9 July 1942 he was arrested again and on 10 July 1942, the transit camp Ludwigslust and Hamburg in the extermination camp Auschwitz deported. He is said to have died in 1942, according to other sources he had to do forced labor after his deportation and died in Hildesheim in 1945.
This is where
KÄTHE MEINUNGEN lived
. Tobias
born 1,904th
'protective custody' in 1938
instructed
State Institute Neustrelitz
deported 07/10/1942
Auschwitz
murdered
Kätheätze was born on December 19, 1904 as Käthe Tobias in Grabow and was married to Hermann Voices. From November 10 to 16, 1938, she was imprisoned in Alt-Strelitz prison. Their daughter Hannacha was born on August 22, 1940. On 9 July 1942, she was arrested on July 10, 1942 with her daughter and husband Hermann via the transit camp Ludwigslust and Hamburg to the extermination camp Auschwitz deported , where she was murdered shortly after arrival. At the time of the deportation , she was five months pregnant and her daughter Hanna was not yet two years old.
Here lived
HANNA OPINIONS
Vol. 1940
deported 07/10/1942
Auschwitz
murdered
Hanna (Hannacha) Opinions was born on August 22, 1940 in Hagenow. On July 10, 1942, she and her mother were deported to the Auschwitz extermination camp via the Ludwigslust transit camp and Hamburg. At that time she was not yet two years old. According to her, the museum in the former school and town hall at was the Old Synagogue Hanna opinions house named.
Parkstrasse 33
World icon
0November 3, 2011
KURT MEYERHEIM
born in 1907 lived here .
Escape 1935
Fate unknown

THEA MEYERHEIM
nee lived here . Davidsohn,
born in 1910,
escaped 1935
Argentina
survived
Thea Meyerheim was born as Thea Davidsohn on December 4, 1910 in Hagenow. She was able to emigrate to Argentina in 1935 and so survived the Holocaust. She died on October 15, 2000.

DORA DAVIDSOHN,
born in 1912, lived here,
escaped 1935, survived
Argentina
Dora Davidsohn was born on December 4, 1912 in Hagenow. In 1935 she managed to escape to Argentina.

HELENE DAVIDSOHN
nee lived here . Perleberg
age unknown
hometown left
1935 Berlin
escape 1941
Argentina
survived
Helene Davidsohn was born as Helene Perleberg in Berlin on January 6, 1881 . She was married to Louis Davidsohn, moved to Berlin with him in 1935 and emigrated to Argentina in August 1941.
Here lived
LOUIS DAVID SON
Age Unknown
forced sale
of the company
home leave
in 1935 Berlin
flight 1941
Argentina
survived
Louis Davidsohn was born on November 6, 1878 in Schönlanke and owned a cheese factory in Hagenow. In 1919 he was elected a city councilor. Due to reprisals against him and his family, who had taken in ten Jewish children from Berlin who were looking for relaxation, he sold his factory and moved to Berlin in 1935. In August 1941 he emigrated to Argentina with his wife.

GERDA DAVIDSOHN
nee lived here . Frey
born in 1909,
fleeing 1935,
fate unknown

HEINZ DAVIDSOHN,
born in 1906, lived here,
escaped 1935, survived
Argentina
Bahnhofstrasse 4
World icon
0November 3, 2011
MARGARETE
SOMMERFELD
nee lived here . Swolinsky
born in 1892, left
hometown
1939,
survived Hamburg
Margarete Sommerfeld was born Margarete Swolinzky on April 4, 1892 in Greifenhagen . She had been married to Hans Sommerfeld since 1922 and had two children. She moved to Hamburg with her husband in 1939 and survived the Holocaust.

KLAUS
SOMMERFELD,
born in 1925, lived here .
Hometown
1939 Hamburg
arrested. 1945
Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp
liberated / survived
Klaus Sommerfeld was born on October 27, 1925 as the son of Margarete and Hans Sommerfeld in Hagenow. He left Hagenow for Hamburg in 1939, came to the Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp in 1945 and was liberated by British soldiers. After the war he studied medicine and later took over his father's practice in Eppendorf .

DIETER
SOMMERFELD,
born in 1923, lived here .
Hometown
1939 Hamburg
arrested. 1945
Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp
liberated / survived
Hans Dieter Sommerfeld was born on August 9, 1923 as the son of Margarete and Hans Sommerfeld in Hagenow. He left Hagenow for Hamburg in 1939, came to the Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp in 1945 and was liberated by British soldiers. After the war he studied law and worked in a tax authority in Hamburg. Hans Sommerfeld died in 1985 by suicide in Reinbek.
Here lived
DR. HANS A.
Sommerfeld
Jg. 1894
disbarment
victims of the pogrom
home leave
in 1939 Hamburg
survived
Hans Adolf Sommerfeld was born on November 24th, 1894 in Luckenwalde . He studied medicine in Berlin and signed up for military service in 1914, during which he lost a leg. He then worked as a doctor at the Charité , married his wife Margarete in 1922 and moved with her to Hagenow, where he took over a doctor's practice. He had to give up the practice he opened himself in 1938 due to reprisals. After moving to Hamburg, he was allowed because of the occupation prohibition does not work as a doctor to the 1945th In August 1945 he reopened his own practice in Hamburg and worked there as a doctor. He died on May 24, 1965 in Hamburg.

Relocation dates

  • On July 25, 2009, four stumbling blocks were laid in Langen Strasse.
  • On November 3, 2011, eleven stumbling blocks were moved to two addresses.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The Jews of Hagenow In: juden-in-mecklenburg.de , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  2. Axel Seitz: Grandfather's Gravestone In: juedische-allgemeine.de , November 16, 2010, accessed on February 26, 2019.
  3. ^ Commemorative medal for Hermann's opinions from the Jewish Community in Berlin In: landesmuseum-mecklenburg.de , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  4. Coin Details In: lanzauctions.com , accessed on 26 February of 2019.
  5. ^ Opinions, Herman Hermann. In: Memorial Book - Victims of Persecution of the Jews under the National Socialist Tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. Retrieved February 26, 2019 .
  6. a b Marcus Stöcklin: The night of horror at Hagenow. In: ostsee-zeitung.de. November 9, 2013, accessed February 26, 2019 .
  7. ^ Opinions, Käthe Käte Rahel. In: Memorial Book - Victims of Persecution of the Jews under the National Socialist Tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. Retrieved February 26, 2019 .
  8. Bernd Kasten: Persecution and deportation of the Jews in Mecklenburg 1938-1945 . State Center for Political Education Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, 2008, ISBN 978-3-940207-16-6 , p. 38 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  9. opinions Hannacha. In: Memorial Book - Victims of Persecution of the Jews under the National Socialist Tyranny in Germany 1933–1945. Retrieved February 26, 2019 .
  10. Permanent exhibition in the Hanna- Augen -Haus In: museum-hagenow.de , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  11. Meyerheim, Thea In: calzareth.com , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  12. a b c Stolpersteine ​​for the Jews of Mecklenburg In: juden-in-mecklenburg.de , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  13. a b 1.2.4.1 Reichsvereinigung der Juden (card index) / 1920 In: its-arolsen.org , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  14. 1.2.4.1 Reichsvereinigung der Juden (card index) / Davidsohn In: its-arolsen.org , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  15. Heidemarie Gertrud Vormann: Architectural History Studies on Synagogues in Mecklenburg In: tu-braunschweig.de , accessed on February 26, 2019. Dissertation 2012. (PDF; 24 MB; p. 334)
  16. a b c d Dr. med. Hans Sommerfeld (1894–1965). In: sommerfeldfamilien.net , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  17. Stolpersteine ​​in Hagenow In: hagenow.de , accessed on February 26, 2019.
  18. Stolpersteine ​​in Hagenow | Sophie Medienwerkstatt eV In: sophie-medien.de , accessed on February 26, 2019.