Hahnheim
General information: First Jewish presence: 1723 (two families); peak Jewish population: 90 in 1878 (14.3% of the total population); Jewish population in 1933: 17
Summary: Records suggest that the Jews of Hahnheim may have
established a prayer room in the early 19th century. We know
for certain, however, that the community opened a cemetery
and a synagogue in 1840, the latter of which was built on the
Synagogenhof, or “synagogue yard,” (later renamed Freier
Platz). The cemetery was vandalized in 1904.
By 1933, the Jews of Koengernheim, Mommenheim and
Selzen had been affiliated with the Hahnheim community.
One day after Pogrom Night, rioters set the synagogue
building on fire; fuelled with goods and utensils looted
from Jewish homes and businesses, the blaze, by the time
it died out, had gutted the entire building. The synagogue’s
ruins were cleared shortly after the pogrom. The cellar roof,
however, which protruded one meter above ground level,
remained intact, and was later used as a podium for Naziorganized
public events; the cellar itself was used for storing
water.
Four converts were the only Jews to remain in Hahnheim
after Pogrom Night. At least three Hahnheim Jews perished
in the Shoah.
Hahnheim’s Jewish cemetery was destroyed in 1944, after
which the headstones were used to construct an anti-tank
trap. The cemetery was rebuilt after the war, and a memorial
stone was unveiled there in 1981.
Author / Sources: Bronagh Bowerman
Sources: AJ, EJL, PK-HNF, SG-RPS
Sources: AJ, EJL, PK-HNF, SG-RPS
Located in: rhineland-palatinate