Holzminden
General information: First Jewish presence: 1557; peak Jewish population: 130 in 1890; Jewish population in 1933: 84
Summary:
Although Jews lived in Holzminden in the 16th century,
the modern community emerged in 1736, when a modest
prayer hall was established in the home of Isaac Gerson.
Other prayer halls were consecrated in Holzminden during
the ensuing decades, and in 1836 the community built a
large synagogue with a women’s gallery, schoolrooms and
an apartment for a teacher.
By 1836, members of this moderately prosperous
community were involved in many trades, including
livestock trading, dry goods, textiles and moneylending. Jews
later branched out into other occupations; some entered the
banking and railway industries, and the town was home to
a Jewish-owned bookbindery and tannery. Local Jews were
active in civic life, enlisted in the army during World War
I—25 enlisted and four died—and established numerous
clubs and organizations, for example, a club for Jewish war
veterans and a sports club.
Jewish-Christian relations were good in Holzminden, and
anti-Semitism was vigorously resisted there during the 1920s.
In 1933, however, the nation-wide anti-Jewish boycott ended
nearly two centuries of peaceful coexistence.
The synagogue interior was destroyed on Pogrom Night,
the contents were burned outside. In 1942, Holzminden’s
few remaining Jews were deported to the camps, from which
only two returned.
The synagogue was returned to the Jewish community
after the war. A memorial was later unveiled at the site.
Author / Sources: Harold Slutzkin
Sources: EJL, LJG
Sources: EJL, LJG
Located in: lower-saxony