Gross-Freden
General information: First Jewish presence: 18th century; peak Jewish population: 65 in 1854; Jewish population in 1933: see below
Summary:
The Jewish community of Gross Freden, of which Jews from
Klein Freden and other neighboring villages were members,
was largely made up of peddlers, horse traders, butchers and,
later, merchants and shopkeepers.
In 1858, an older prayer room was replaced by a
synagogue—with 50 seats—on Ostenbergstrasse. The
community consecrated a cemetery on An der Steingrube
in 1890, and we also know that beginning in the early 19th
century, Gross Freden was home to a Jewish school whose
teachers changed frequently.
In 1933, two Jews lived in Gross Freden and 15 in Klein
Freden, after which many Jews left the area. In March
1938, the synagogue was sold to an undisclosed buyer;
and in October 1938, the cemetery was sold to the Jewish
community in Hildesheim.
On Pogrom Night, Gross Freden’s remaining Jews were
attacked and arrested. Members of the SA threw a burning
bale of straw into the former synagogue, but the new owner
intervened and prevented the destruction of his property.
Jewish homes and properties were damaged and looted by
the SA and local citizens.
In 1941, a Jewish women in Klein Freden committed
suicide. The town’s last Jews were deported to concentration
camps in 1942. At least ten Jews from Gross and Klein
Freden perished in the Shoah.
Gross Freden’s former synagogue was remodeled into a
residential building in 1940.
Author / Sources: Heike Zaun Goshen
Sources: AH, HU, JGNB1
www.freden.de/uploads/media/Chronik_der_Samtgemeinde_
Freden__L._.pdf
Located in: lower-saxony