Homburg/Saar
General information: First Jewish presence: 1686; peak Jewish population: 281 in 1824; Jewish population in 1933: 163
Summary:
Although the Jewish community of Homburg was founded
in 1823, a prayer hall had existed there since the second half
of the 18th century. The community consecrated a cemetery
in 1823; a synagogue in 1862 (6 Kosterstrasse); a mikveh
(unknown date of construction); and a school in 1864.
The school, which was presided over by a teacher who also
performed the duties of chazzan and shochet, closed in 1911.
A new cemetery was consecrated in Homburg in 1934, but
it was seldom used.
In 1933, eight children studied religion in Homburg. A
welfare society, a women’s association, a society for Jewish
literature and history, and a youth society were active in
the community, with which the Jews of Waldmohr were
affiliated.
The community was dissolved in 1935, when only four
or five Jewish families lived in Homburg. On Pogrom Night
(November 1938), SS men demolished the synagogue’s
interior and removed the Star of David from the north
gable; five Jewish men were sent to Dachau. In 1939, the
municipality appropriated the partially burned synagogue
building, which was later damaged during a wartime
bombing.
One hundred and thirty-five Jews left Homburg/Saar. On
October 22, 1940, the remaining 17 Jews were deported to
Gurs. Twenty-nine local Jews were murdered in the Shoah.
In 2003, a section of the former synagogue—part of
the structure was demolished in 1992—was opened as a
memorial site.
Author / Sources: Esther Sarah Evans
Sources: AJ, EJL
Sources: AJ, EJL
Located in: saarland