Gleiwitz
General information: First Jewish presence: approximately 14th century; peak Jewish population: 2,009 in 1867 (16% of the total population); Jewish pop. in 1933: 1,803
Summary: Jews were expelled from Gleiwitz in 1587, when the area
was under Hapsburg rule. The forerunners of the modern
community settled in the city in 1715; in 1812, the same
year in which a synagogue and mikveh were consecrated with
much fanfare, 180 Jews lived in Gleiwitz. Most local Jews
were small business owners (two were landowners), because
Jews were prevented from joining the guilds that would have
enabled them to become craftsmen or skilled professionals. During the 1840s, however, with the advent of
emancipation and the ensuing industrial development, young
Jews from the surrounding areas moved to Gleiwitz in large
numbers. In order to accommodate the growing population,
the community built a large Orthodox synagogue with a
double gallery, a dome and an eclectic mix of architectural
styles; the inauguration ceremony (1861) was attended by
many prominent government officials.
The old synagogue was converted into a school building,
and the community also maintained an elementary school,
ran courses in the Hebrew language, an orphanage, a
kindergarten, an old-age home, a soup kitchen, and welfare
services for the sick and needy. After World War I, a branch of
the Reich Federation of Jewish Front Soldiers was opened in
Gleiwitz, as were two sports clubs (Bar Kochba and Hakoah)
and four Zionist clubs. The community—with which 20
adjacent Jewish communities were affiliated—was home to
several industrialists, 12 doctors and 14 lawyers.
Although Gleiwitz Jews were protected by the League
of Nations’ convention on minority rights until 1937,
many had the foresight to leave. On Pogrom Night, the
synagogue was set on fire, Jewish-owned stores and factories
were vandalized and hundreds of Jews were detained in the
community center; of these, 235 were sent to Buchenwald
the next day, where at least six perished. Many local Jews
left Germany after Pogrom Night, mainly for South Africa
and Latin America. The remaining Jews were forcibly moved
into designated “Jews’ Houses,” after which, in 1942,
they were deported, in six transports, to the death camps.
Several Jews committed suicide before the deportations, and
approximately 40 others, all of whom were married to non-
Jewish spouses, managed to remain in the city.
After the war, approximately 200 Polish Shoah survivors
established a new Jewish community in Gleiwitz, but nearly
all immigrated to Israel after the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. The
Gleiwitz museum houses a permanent exhibition on the
history of Silesian Jewry.
Photo: The synagogue of Gleiwitz, probably in or around the year 1905. Courtesy of: Unknown.
Author / Sources: Harold Slutzkin
Sources: EJL, LJG
Sources: EJL, LJG
Located in: silesia