Saarbruecken
General information: First Jewish presence: 1321 (see below); peak Jewish population: unknown; Jewish population in 1933: 2,400
Summary: The first Jewish presence to be recorded in this area was in
St. Johann, near Saarbruecken, in 1321. It was only during
the 1760s, however, that Jews moved to Saarbruecken in
significant numbers.
In 1825, a Jewish school for religious studies, presided
over by a teacher/chazzan, was established in Saarbruecken.
In 1927, three teachers supervised seven classes; and in 1932,
209 pupils attended the school (then offering five classes)
for four hours each week.
The Jews of Saarbruecken consecrated three cemeteries:
in 1840, 1845 and 1919, respectively. Records from 1860
mention the existence of a prayer hall on Talstrasse, and
the growing community moved to several larger prayer
halls in the course of the late 19th century. In 1888, after
much deliberation, the community decided to build a
synagogue in St. Johann; construction commenced that
year and, in November 1890, the community inaugurated
a new synagogue whose congregation was liberal in
orientation. The smaller Orthodox community, founded
during the Weimer period by Jews from Eastern Europe,
maintained their own synagogue and, after 1932, a mikveh.
A community center with a weekday prayer room was
opened in 1919, and it was there that the Orthodox
congregation held its High Holiday services, while the
liberal congregation, unable to accommodate the large
High Holiday crowds in its synagogue, rented an additional
prayer hall for that purpose.
In 1933, approximately 2,400 Jews lived in Saarbruecken.
The rabbi was Dr. Solomon Ruelf, and, after his emigration
in 1934, Dr. Rotschild. Three hundred and ten pupils
studied religion, and several Jewish associations and branches of nation-wide Jewish organizations were active
in the community. In 1934, a Jewish elementary school was
opened in Saarbruecken.
Although most Jews left Saarbruecken after the Saarland
region was returned to Germany in 1935, this community
was the only one still officially functioning in the Saarland
in 1936. Rabbi Rotschild continued to serve all Jews in the
region until his emigration from Germany in 1938.
On November 8, 1938 (one day before Pogrom Night),
Nazis destroyed the synagogue’s furniture and lamps. The
synagogue was invaded three times on Pogrom Night itself;
its ritual objects and interior were destroyed, after which
the building was burned to the ground. Between 130 and
150 Jewish men were taken from their homes and marched
through town to the accompanying cheers and blows of a
mob. Some were released the next day, but most were sent to
Dachau after having swastikas painted on their faces.
When war broke out in 1939, Saarbruecken’s remaining
Jews were sent to work camps. At least 299 Saarbruecken
Jews perished in the Shoah. The city’s two Jewish cemeteries
were desecrated during the war.
A new Jewish community in Saarbruecken, founded
in 1946, inaugurated a synagogue (with 430 seats) on
Beethovenplatz in 1951. Later, in 1978, a memorial plaque
was unveiled at the former synagogue site.
Author / Sources: Nurit Borut
Sources: DGJS, DNPS, DZG, EJL, FJG
Sources: DGJS, DNPS, DZG, EJL, FJG
Located in: saarland