Eichstetten

General information: First Jewish presence: approximately 1717; peak Jewish population: 420 in 1871; Jewish population in 1933: 91
Summary: Beginning in the 1760s, the Jews of Eichstetten conducted services in a prayer hall located in a private residence. The community consecrated a cemetery and a synagogue—it housed a mikveh and was located at 10 Altweg—in 1809 and 1829, respectively. Three charitable societies (including a chevra kadisha and a women’s association), a youth association and a branch of the Achawa society were active in Eichstetten in 1933. The community still employed a teacher/chazzan, but only one child received religious instruction that year. The Jews of Endingen were members of the Eichstetten community. On the day before Pogrom Night, SS and SA men destroyed the inside of the synagogue and burned the furniture; local Jews were forced to watch the destruction. Jewish property was also damaged, and the mikveh was destroyed the following day. Eighteen men were sent to Dachau, where two died. Fifty local Jews emigrated, eight moved to other places in Germany and nine died in Eichstetten. Within the remaining exterior walls of the former synagogue a garden was planted. In 1988, a plaque was also unveiled at the cemetery.
Photo: The synagogue of Eichstetten. Courtesy of: Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People, Art. No. 101A-A14.
Photo 2: Interior of the synagogue of Eichstetten. Courtesy of: Central Archives for the History of the Jewish People, Art. No. 101A-A15.
Author / Sources: Maren Cohen
Sources: AJ, EJL, PK-BW
Located in: baden-wuerttemberg