Meinerzhagen
General information: First Jewish presence: 1750s; peak Jewish population: 51 in 1885; Jewish population in 1933: 43
Summary: Although Jews lived in Meinerzhagen in the 1750s, it was
only in the early 19th century that a permanent Jewish
presence was established there. Local Jews attended services
in Lieberhausen (or Lieberhause) until the 1840s, when a
prayer room was opened in Meinerzhagen. In 1927, a prayer
room with 50 seats was established at 37b, Hauptstrasse. The
Jewish community maintained cemeteries on Schwarzenberg
(1813-1913) and Heerstrasse (1881-1945), the latter of
which was purchased in 1910.
In 1933, 43 Jews lived in Meinerzhagen. According to
records, a shochet served the community in that year.
Meinerzhagen’s prayer room was closed at some point
before Pogrom Night. On the morning of November 10,
1938, SS men set its ritual objects—they had earlier been
stored in a private residence— on fire and damaged a Jewish
shop. A local Jew who had been arrested on Pogrom Night
committed suicide after his release.
Between 1935 and 1941, 15 local Jews emigrated and
nine relocated within Germany. In 1942, 11 Jews were
deported. At least 13 Meinerzhagen Jews perished in the
Shoah.
The prayer room building, which was later converted into
a residence and shop, was torn down in 2005/06. A memorial
stone commemorates Meinerzhagen’s deported Jews.
Author / Sources: Heidemarie Wawrzyn
Sources: EJL. FJG, HU, SG -NRW, SIA, YV
de.academic.ru/dic.nsf/dewiki/940505#Geschichte
Sources: EJL. FJG, HU, SG -NRW, SIA, YV
de.academic.ru/dic.nsf/dewiki/940505#Geschichte
Located in: north-rhine-westphalia