Illingen
General information: First Jewish presence: 1717; peak Jewish population: 270 in 1910; Jewish population in 1933: 107
Summary: Illingen Jews were able to employ a rabbi during the 18th and
early 19th centuries. The community consecrated a cemetery
in 1747 (enlarged in 1905 and in 1923); a synagogue in 1768;
and a new synagogue, with a schoolroom and an apartment
for the teacher, in 1859 (at 11 Hauptstrasse). Illingen’s Jewish
school, which was presided over by a teacher who also performed
the duties of chazzan and shochet, was closed down in 1933.
In 1933, five Jewish associations and a branch of the
Reich Federation of Jewish Front Soldiers were active in the
community, with which the Jews of Merchweiler, Sulzbach
and Querscheid were affiliated. Many Jews left Illingen in
1935, when Germany annexed the Saarland region.
On Pogrom Night, Jews were assaulted, Jewish-owned
businesses and homes were wrecked, the synagogue was
looted and burned down, the cemetery was desecrated
and Jewish men were sent to Dachau. The municipality
eventually purchased the synagogue and cemetery sites, the
latter of which was cleared in 1939.
Illingen’s remaining 19 Jews were deported to Gurs on
October 22, 1940. At least 61 local Jews perished in the
Shoah.
The cemetery was renovated in 1949, and a memorial was
unveiled there that same year. The remains of the entrance
to the synagogue—the site was cleared in 1949—were
transferred to the cemetery.
Photo: The synagogue of Illingen after it was destroyed on Pogrom Night. The prayer room was on the first floor and the school rooms were in the basement. Courtesy of: Photo Lorenz, Illingen.
Author / Sources: Esther Sarah Evans
Sources: AJ, EJL
Sources: AJ, EJL
Located in: saarland