Neheim
General information: First Jewish presence: 17th century; peak Jewish population: 103 in 1910; Jewish population in 1933: 62
Summary: The earliest reference to a Jewish presence in Neheim is dated
1651. The community conducted services in prayer rooms until
1876, when a synagogue was inaugurated on Mendener Strasse.
Local Jews established a school in 1819 and a cemetery (near
the Moehne-River) in 1835. The community—many members
of which were businessmen and industrialists—was part of the
Arnsberg regional congregation in 1854/55.
Five Jewish children received religious instruction in
1933, and a Jewish women’s auxiliary association (founded in 1931) was active in the town. Later, in 1938, Jewish
youths were expelled from the high school and forbidden
to attend public dances. Between 1935 and 1939, 18 local
Jews emigrated from Germany.
On Pogrom Night, rioters destroyed the synagogue’s ritual
objects, Torah scrolls and furniture. Neheim’s last Jewishowned
shop was closed in December 1938. By 1941, the
remaining Jews had been moved into a single house, from
which they were collected for forced labor and, in 1943,
deportation. At least 85 Jews from Neheim and nearby
Huesten perished in the Shoah. Yad Vashem’s records for
Neheim include the Jewish populations of Neheim, Huesten,
and Neheim-Huesten, making it difficult to determine how
many of the deceased were actually from Neheim.
Used as a storage site after 1945, the synagogue was
renovated in the 1980s and, in 1982, declared a listed
monument. A plaque has been affixed to the building, which
is now owned by a local association.
Author / Sources: Heidemarie Wawrzyn
Sources: EJL, FJG, HU, SG-NRW, YV
Sources: EJL, FJG, HU, SG-NRW, YV
Located in: north-rhine-westphalia