Rheinbach
General information: First Jewish presence: 1345; peak Jewish population: 113 in 1901; Jewish population in 1933: 27
Summary: Local records from 1345 mention a Jew who was engaged
in commerce at that time. Rheinbach’s Jewish community
was established in the mid-17th century, a century during which the whole town burned down twice, and Jews were
persecuted in local witch-hunts.
In 1780, when nine Jewish families (39 Jews) lived in
Rheinbach, the magistrate petitioned to limit the Jewish
population to three or four families. Later, in 1843, 60 Jews
lived there (total population: 1,597).
Communal institutions included a synagogue on
Schweigelstrasse (established in 1872) and two cemeteries:
the first, in Rheinbach-Wormersdorf, is located on the edge
of the woods near Tomburg (three gravestones are still intact);
the second, located on present-day Am Juedischem Friedhof
(literally “at the Jewish cemetery”), was built near the freight yard.
On Pogrom Night, rioters set the synagogue on fire and
confiscated Torah scrolls and ritual objects. Five Jewish
men were arrested and sent to a concentration camp. The
synagogue ruins were later torn down.
Of the 19 Jews who lived in Rheinbach when World War
II broke out, all were sent to the East, via the Bonn-Endenich
transit camp, in February 1942. At least 48 Rheinbach Jews
perished in the Shoah.
Photo: The burned synagogue of Rheinbach in 1938. Courtesy of: City Archive of Rheinbach.
Author / Sources: Esther Sarah Evans
Sources: EJL, IAJGS, YV
Sources: EJL, IAJGS, YV
Located in: north-rhine-westphalia