List of stumbling blocks in Lindow (Mark)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stumbling blocks for mother and son Frankfurter

The Stolpersteine ​​von Lindow (Mark) contains the stumbling blocks in the town of Lindow (Mark) in the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district . Stumbling blocks remind of the fate of the people who were murdered, deported , expelled or driven to suicide by the National Socialists . The Stolpersteine ​​were designed by the Cologne artist Gunter Demnig and are usually laid by himself. They are mostly in front of the victim's last self-chosen place of residence.

The stumbling blocks were laid by Gunter Demnig in 2011 and 2012.

Laying stumbling blocks

Stumbling block inscription Location Name, life
Stumbling block for Alfred Frankfurter (Lindow (Mark)). Jpg

ALFRED
FRANKFURTER GEB. LIVED HERE.
1902
ASSIGNED 1941
JAKOBY'S SCHEMES
SAYN / KOBLENZ
DEPORTED 1942
TOWARDS THE EAST
? ? ?
Street of Peace 14
( location )
Alfred Frankfurter was born on April 18, 1902, the son of Pauline Frankfurter. From the age of 15, there were increasing signs that the young man was suffering from a mental illness. His emotional distress expressed itself in the fact that "the brain activity seems to stop temporarily". He was admitted to the Charité for an inpatient stay , later several times in the Neuruppin mental hospital and the Bernau mental hospital. The mother always brought him back home. The district court of Lindow incapacitated him and at the request of Bernau he was incapacitated. In February 1941 Alfred was admitted to the Jakoby institute in Sayn, today Bendorf , near Koblenz. This institution was the last stay for around six hundred Jewish women and men in Germany. Between March and November 1942, almost all of them were deported to extermination camps in the east. Alfred Frankfurter also met this fate. He could n't survive the Shoah .

On November 26, 1942, his mother took her own life.

Stolperstein for Pauline Frankfurter (Lindow (Mark)). Jpg
HERE LIVED
PAULINE
FRANKFURT
GEB. LEWINSOHN
GEB. 1866
HUMILIATED / DISRUSTED
ESCAPE TO DEATH
25.11.1942
Street of Peace 14 Pauline Frankfurter was born on March 1, 1866. She was a haberdashery and had a son, Alfred Frankfurter. From around the age of 15 he suffered from a "mental ailment". Her son was admitted several times. The mother tried to bring him back home. He was eventually incapacitated, emasculated and permanently admitted in 1941. He came to the Jacoby'sche sanatorium and nursing home for Jewish "nervous and mentally ill " in Sayn near Koblenz, today Bendorf . Pauline Frankfurter and her son lost their property and their lives under the Nazis. From 1939, the businesswoman could no longer dispose of her assets. In February 1942 it was expropriated in favor of the German Reich. The widow committed suicide on November 26, 1942, after her son had been deported, after she and her brother's family had received an order to leave the country. She was completely impoverished.

MAX KREIDE JG LIVED HERE
. 1858
DEPORTED 1942
THERESIENSTADT
MURDERED January 26, 1943
Street of peace 42 Max Kreide was born on May 18, 1858 in Kalisz . He lived in Lindow and Radinkendorf and was a hat maker. He had at least one son - Emil. On October 28, 1942, he was deported from Berlin on Transport I / 72 to the Theresienstadt ghetto . His number on the transport was 9184. Max Kreide was murdered on January 26, 1943 in Theresienstadt.

Laying data

The stumbling blocks were laid on the following days:

  • August 9, 2011: Alfred and Pauline Frankfurter
  • November 30, 2012: Max Kreide

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Lindow (Mark) : Stolpersteine , accessed on November 20, 2018
  2. Christian Kranz: Emasculated, expropriated, murdered history Two stumbling blocks in Lindow are intended to remind of neighbors who did not survive the Third Reich , Märkische Allgemeine , March 19, 2011
  3. ^ Commemorative book victims of the persecution of Jews under the Nazi tyranny in Germany 1933–1945: Kreide, Max , accessed on February 17, 2019
  4. Märkische Allgemeine: Commitment to remembering stumbling blocks for the former Lindower , November 20, 2012 ( available on the Londow Monastery website )
  5. Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names: Max Kreide , based on the Theresienstädter Gedenkbuch, accessed on February 17, 2019