Holzappel
General information: First Jewish presence: mid-18th century; peak Jewish population: 42 in 1871 and 1885; Jewish population in 1933: 24 (see below)
Summary:
In 1843, the Jews of Holzappel formed a community
with Jews from Doernberg, Eppenrod, Isselbach and
Langenscheid. Holzappel’s synagogue, which was located in a
privately-owned house, was renovated in 1844. Jewish burials
took place in Cramberg until the community consecrated
its own burial grounds.
In 1932/33, approximately 24 Jews lived in Holzappel,
five in Langenscheid and 26 in Isselbach. Eight schoolchildren
studied religion with a teacher from Diez. Services were
conducted only on Saturdays and holidays, alternating
between the Holzappel synagogue and a prayer hall in
Isselbach. The community took preventative action before Pogrom
Night by hiding some of the synagogue’s ritual objects and
two Torah scrolls in a community member’s home. On
Pogrom Night, SA men destroyed the synagogue’s interior
and threw Torah curtains and ritual objects into the yard.
Three Jewish homes were ransacked, their inhabitants beaten.
All Jews, including women and children, were arrested and
detained at the council house. Jewish homes in Isselbach were
attacked, and we also know that three men from Holzappel
and five from Isselbach were sent to Dachau.
After the pogrom, the remaining Torah scrolls and ritual
objects were sent abroad for safekeeping. The synagogue
building was sold for half its actual value.
Holzappel’s remaining Jews were deported in 1941/42;
Isselbach’s last Jews were sent to old-age homes in Frankfurt
in February 1941. At least 12 Jews originally from Holzappel
and 10 from Isselbach perished in the Shoah.
The former synagogue was converted into a commercial
building. Memorial plaques have been unveiled at the
synagogue site and at the cemetery.
Author / Sources: Bronagh Bowerman
Sources: EJL, PK-HNF, SG-RPS, YV
Sources: EJL, PK-HNF, SG-RPS, YV
Located in: rhineland-palatinate