"Local Jews initially conducted services in the teacher’s residence on Hintergasse, and we also know that in 1784/85, the community built a synagogue on the same street; renovated on several occasions—records suggest that a women’s balcony with 20 seats was built in 1879—the synagogue seated 25 male worshipers...Later, on Pogrom Night (November 1938), local Nazis and construction workers destroyed the synagogue’s interior and set the building on fire...The synagogue’s remaining walls were damaged in an air raid in 1944/45 and torn down in 1962; a commemorative plaque was unveiled at the site in 1995."
Bronagh Bowerman
Copyright: Pogrom Night 1938 - A Memorial to the Destroyed Synagogues of Germany/ Germansynagogues.com

Notes

Sources:Alemannia Judaica, www.alemannia-judaica.de The Encyclopedia of Jewish Life Before and During the Holocaust, Shmuel Spector [Ed.], [publisher] Yad Vashem and the New York University Press, 2001., Führer durch die Jüdische Gemeindeverwaltung und Wohlfahrtspflege in Deutschland 1923-1933, Andreas Nachama, Simon Hermann [Eds.], [publisher] Edition Hentrich, 1995., “und dies ist die Pforte des Himmels”: Synagogen Rheinland-Pfalz/Saarland, Will Schmid, Stefan Fischbach and Ingrid Westerhoff [Eds.], publication initiated by Joachim Glatz and Meier Schwarz, [publisher] Phillipp Von Zabern, 2005.

Details

Date Added Apr 20, 2020
Category Synagogue
Country DE
State Rhineland-Palatinate
City Freudenburg
Exhibits Pogrom Night 1938 - A Memorial to the Destroyed Synagogues of Germany

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