Datteln
General information: First Jewish presence: 1814; peak Jewish population: 56 in 1900; Jewish population in 1933: 33
Summary:
Two Jewish families settled in Datteln in 1814. Records
indicate that the town's first Jewish institution was a
cemetery, laid in 1817. By the year 1831, the Jewish families
had established a prayer room in a residential building called
Hecht am Alten Markt.
In 1848, Datteln�s Jews�now three families�became
part of the district synagogue association of Recklinghausen
along with the Jews living in Ahsen, Herten, Horneburg,
Waltrop and, of course, Recklinghausen.
In 1860, the small Datteln community consisted of three
to five families; they held prayer services in a house belonging to the Ellermans, on Tuerkenstrasse. The prayer room was
moved twice more: to the Huelsdas family home on Hohen
Strasse, and to a house owned by the Sauer family, also on
Hohenstrasse.
In 1912, Datteln’s Jews purchased a plot of land on the corner
of Marktstrasse and Tuerkenstrasse (today 1 Tuerkenort); a small
synagogue was built there in 1929. The one-story building
contained two rooms; the prayer room seated approximately 40
persons. Rabbi Dr. Steinthal led the synagogue’s inauguration
ceremony on December 16, 1929.
The last burial in Datteln’s Jewish cemetery took place in
1933, the year of Hitler’s rise to power, when 33 Jews still
lived in the town. Twenty-one Jewish residents remained
in 1937.
On October 23, 1938, the Datteln Jews held the last
prayer service in their synagogue; the building was sold in
November. There are conflicting reports as to whether the
synagogue was the target of Pogrom Night violence. Attacks
reportedly took place there on the night of November 10-
11 when, presumably, an attempt was made to burn down
the building. We do know, however, that the cemetery was
desecrated; it was further damaged by fighting during World
War II.
According to Yad Vashem, at least 15 Jews who were born
in Datteln or lived there for some time perished in the Shoah.
The former synagogue was turned into a residence in
1948. Before it was demolished in 1984, the building had
also functioned as a store house and a garage. As of this
writing, no memorial plaque has been erected on the site.
Eight gravestones, with Hebrew and German inscriptions,
survive in the Jewish cemetery on Dueppelstrasse.
Author / Sources: Bronagh Bowerman
Sources: HU, SG-NRW, SIA, YV
Sources: HU, SG-NRW, SIA, YV
Located in: north-rhine-westphalia