Kaiserslautern
General information: First Jewish presence: 1293; peak Jewish population: 779 in 1905; Jewish population in 1933: 648
Summary: Although the Jewish community of Kaiserslautern was
annihilated in the Black Death pogroms of 1348/49, a new
Jewish presence was established there in 1383. Kaiserslautern’s
medieval Jewish community maintained a synagogue and a
mikveh. It was during the 19th century, however, that the
community, with which the Jews of Mehlingen and Gunbach
were affiliated, experienced substantial growth.
Beginning in 1828, Kaiserslautern was home to a district
rabbinate. The 19th-century community conducted services
in prayer halls until 1849, when a synagogue was dedicated
in the city. Later, in 1866, a new synagogue—with 400
seats for men and 200 for women—was established on
Fruehlingsstrasse. The Jews of Kaiserslautern also maintained
a cemetery and an elementary school, the latter of which was
established in 1838 and closed in 1875. We do not know
when the community hired a teacher/chazzan, but records do
tell us that in 1931/32, he instructed 98 children in religion.
Six hundred and forty-eight Jews lived in Kaiserslautern
in 1933. Dr. Solly Baron was rabbi, and the community
ran four Jewish associations and a branch of the B’nai B’rith
organization.
Local Jews were forced to give up their synagogue in
August 1938, after which they were permitted to establish a
prayer room in a former prison. The synagogue building was
demolished in September
or October of 1938, and
the site was used as a
parade ground after 1939.
On Pogrom Night, 110
Jewish homes and many
Jewish-owned businesses
were ransacked. Torah
scrolls were burned, and
approximately 50 Jewish
men were sent to Dachau.
In 1939, 90 Jews lived
in Kaiserslautern. On
October 22, 1940, 48
local Jews were deported
to the concentration camp in Gurs, France. Deportations from Kaiserslautern continued
until March 1945, and more than 200 Jews originally from
Kaiserslautern perished in the Shoah.
The new Jewish community, founded after 1945,
inaugurated a synagogue in 1965. In 1980, the site on
which the destroyed synagogue once stood was renamed
Synagogenplatz (“synagogue square”); a plaque and a
memorial were unveiled there in 1980 and 2003, respectively
Photo: The synagogue of Kaiserslautern in 1896. Courtesy of: City Archive of Kaiserslautern.
Author / Sources: Heike Zaun Goshen
Sources: AJ, EJL, FJG
www.cad.architektur.tu-darmstadt.de
www.Info-Westpfalz.de
Sources: AJ, EJL, FJG
www.cad.architektur.tu-darmstadt.de
www.Info-Westpfalz.de
Located in: rhineland-palatinate