Goettingen
General information: First Jewish presence: 14th century; peak Jewish population: 641 in 1919; Jewish population in 1933: 475
Summary:
Although we do not know how many Jews lived in Goettingen
in the 14th century, records do tell us that the town was then
home to a synagogue.
The modern Jewish community of Goettingen emerged
in the 17th century. Most local Jews were merchants or
moneylenders, and we also know that some became
academics as early as the 18th century.
The 18th-century community maintained
a synagogue and a school—the latter of which
was presided over by a teacher who also served
as chazzan and shochet—in a rented building
on Buchstrasse (present-day Prinzenstrasse).
The cemetery on Leineberg (present-day
Groninger Landstrasse) was consecrated in
1701.
In 1872, the community built a new
synagogue on Obere/Untere Maschstrasse;
later, in 1895, the building’s seating
capacity was increased from 200 to 450.
The community also maintained a mikveh
(built on Rote Strasse in 1899), a chevra
kadisha, an historical society, B’nai B’rith
lodges (one for men, the other for women)
and a branch of the Central Association of German Citizens of Jewish Faith. At the local university,
several Jewish student organizations were active.
In 1933, in response to anti-Semitic demonstrations
and attacks, many Jews left Goettingen. On Pogrom Night
(November 1938), Jewish property was vandalized and
plundered; the synagogue was set on fire, after which the
ruins were pulled down. Local Jews were arrested, the men
imprisoned. In 1940, the remaining Jews were forcibly
moved into designated houses from which most were
deported between 1942 and 1945.
A new Jewish community emerged in Goettingen
after the war. Today, a trade union building stands on the
former synagogue site. Several plaques and a memorial
commemorate the community.
At least 170 Goettingen Jews died in the Shoah.

Photo: The synagogue of Goettingen in or around the year 1930. Courtesy of: City Archive of Goettingen.
Author / Sources: Heike Zaun Goshen
Sources: AH, HU, JG NB1, SIA
www.wiki-goettingen.de
Sources: AH, HU, JG NB1, SIA
www.wiki-goettingen.de
Located in: lower-saxony