Minden
General information: First Jewish presence: 1270; peak Jewish population: 267 in 1880; Jewish population in 1933: 192
Summary: Beginning in 1650 at the latest, the Minden Jewish community
conducted prayer services in rented prayer rooms. In 1680,
a synagogue was inaugurated at 494 Griesenbruchstrasse
(present-day 1 Videnbullenstrasse); and in 1865, an
impressive synagogue was erected at 6 Kampstrasse, where
services were conducted in German and accompanied by
organ music.
Burials were conducted in a neighboring village before 1700,
after which a Jewish cemetery was consecrated just outside
Marien Gate; in 1890, after the cemetery was closed to make
room for a fortress, new burial grounds were chosen in Erikaweg.
The community developed into a prosperous one, and the
fact that Jews held official positions in the town periodically
sparked anti-Semitic incidents. Minden Jews maintained a
sisterhood, a chevra kadisha and a children’s library. Children
attended the local elementary school and the Jewish youth
movement.
On Pogrom Night, as firemen stood ready to protect the
neighboring houses, Minden’s synagogue was set on fire; the
flames devoured the interior, but not before 14 Torah scrolls,
silverware and an Elijah’s Chair made in 1720 were stolen.
Stores and homes were ransacked, and 60 Jewish men were
sent to Buchenwald. Jewish-owned properties were forcibly
sold after the pogrom, and the synagogue ruins were torn
down. Later, all remaining Jews (most were elderly) were
deported, via Bielefeld, to Warsaw, Riga and Theresienstadt.
In 1945, approximately 100 Jews formed a new
congregation. Minden’s new synagogue, built near the site of
the destroyed house of worship, contains a memorial bearing
the names of all Shoah victims from Minden. An additional
memorial was unveiled in front of the city hall.
Franz Boas, the renowned German-American
anthropologist and activist, was born in Minden.
Author / Sources: Ruth Martina Trucks
Sources: EJL, FJG, LJG, SG-NRW
Sources: EJL, FJG, LJG, SG-NRW
Located in: north-rhine-westphalia