Start My Family Tree Welcome to Geni, home of the world's largest family tree.
Join Geni to explore your genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Jewish families from Düren (Dueren), Germany

Project Tags

view all

Profiles

  • Sally Wertheim (1878 - 1942)
    Eintrag im »Gedenkbuch« des Bundesarchivs: Wertheim, Sally geboren am 21. Dezember 1878 in Essen / - / Rheinprovinz wohnhaft in Düren Deportation: ab Koblenz-Köln-Düsseldorf 15. Juni 1942, Sobibo...
  • Dr. med. Karl Leven (1895 - 1942)
    Eintrag im »Gedenkbuch« des Bundesarchivs: Leven, Karl geboren am 07. Juni 1895 in Düren/Rheinprovinz wohnhaft in Düren / Düren und in Aachen DEPORTATION ab Koblenz - Köln - Düsseldorf ...
  • Bertha Moses (1899 - 1942)
    Eintrag im »Gedenkbuch« des Bundesarchivs: Moses, Berta Bertha née Leven born on 19th October 1899 in Düren / - / Rheinprovinz resident of Düren and Dinslaken Emigration: 18th February 1939, ...
  • Ada Dobrin (1913 - 1978)
  • Dr. Edith Rosalie Wulff (1910 - 1987)
    Edith and Alfred studied dental medicine in Berlin. They came to Palestine in 1934.

DÜREN is a town near Aachen, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

Jews from Dueren are mentioned in 13th-century records. In 1238 Anselm of Dueren and his wife, Jutta, acquired some property in the Jewish quarter of Cologne. In 1241 the Jews of Dueren paid ten marks imperial tax. Judah of Dueren was involved in a famous controversy over a marriage mentioned in a responsum of Meir b. Baruch of Rothenburg. During the second half of the 13th century Isaac ben Meir *Dueren lived in the city.

The community was annihilated during the Black Death (1348–49), and was not reconstituted until the 19th century. The modern community, which had its own elementary school, numbered 252 in 1880, 268 in 1905, and 358 in 1933, but was reduced to 184 in 1939. During Kristallnacht (November 10, 1938) the synagogue and community center were burned down by the Nazis. One hundred Jewish men from Dueren were interned in Buchenwald. In July 1941 the remaining Jews were deported to the death camps. After the war, 15 Jews returned there, but subsequently left, and Jewish community life was not resumed.

Source: Jewish Virtual Library.

http://www.geschichtswerkstatt-dueren.de/gws_dn_namensliste_neu/nam...