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 connected to Twistringen, Germany

Project Tags

Top Surnames

view all

Profiles

  • Abraham Adolf Bloch (1834 - 1917)
    Reference: MyHeritage Family Trees - SmartCopy : Feb 19 2019, 15:33:41 UTC * Reference: MyHeritage Family Trees - SmartCopy : Feb 19 2019, 15:40:46 UTC
  • Simon Bloch (1805 - 1874)
    From the Local Family Database Juden im Deutschen Reich
  • Moses Bloch (1842 - 1923)
    All data from the Juden em Deutsch Reich database here:

This project seeks to collect and classify the Jewish community of Twistringen, Germany. Twistringen is a town in the district of Diepholz, Lower Saxony, Germany. It is situated approximately 30 km northeast of Diepholz, and 30 km southwest of Bremen. The source of the Delme river is located in the city. The most important attraction in Twistringen is the museum of straw processing.

There was a small Jewish community in Twistringen. Until 1938, there was a synagogue, which is still commemorated by a plaque. Somewhat outside of the center of Twistringen there are the remains of a Jewish cemetery

From the site Destroyed German Synagogues: "Twistringen General information: First Jewish presence: 1730; peak Jewish population: 40 in 1858; Jewish population in 1933: unknown

Summary: Twistringen’s synagogue association, which included the Jews living in nearby Heiligenloh and Ehrenburg, was established in 1843. In 1845, the community acquired a building in Twistringen in which it established a synagogue and a school, the latter of which had been operating at a different location since 1830. We also know that this community maintained a mikveh and, after 1789, a cemetery just north of Twistringen. The Jewish school closed down in 1860, and although another was established in 1888, it, too, closed down in 1904.

In 1907/08, Twistringen’s Jewish children studied religion in Bassum with a teacher from Barenburg; later, they studied with a teacher from Diepholz. In 1932, one local child received religious instruction, then provided in Twistringen itself. 

On the morning of November 10, 1938, male Jews were arrested and imprisoned in the fire department’s building. Valuables were stolen from Jewish homes and documents pertaining to the community, placed in the kosher butcher’s home for safekeeping, were confiscated. SA men then set fire to the synagogue.

Several Jewish men were transferred to the prison in Hanover and, later, to Buchenwald, from where they were released in late November 1938. Eight Jews lived in Twistringen in 1939. In 1941, the few who remained were made participate in forced labor. Then began the deportations to Minsk, Warsaw, Auschwitz and Riga; records suggest that the last deportation was that of Alma and Sophie Goldberg in 1943. At least 20 Twistringen Jews perished in the Shoah.

In May 1985, a memorial stone was unveiled on Bachstrasse, near the former synagogue site.

Photo: The synagogue of Twistringen in the spring of 1938. Courtesy of: Town Archive of Twistringen. Author / Sources: Esther Sarah Evans Sources: EJL, JGNB, LJG Located in: Lower-Saxony

Join the Synagogue Memorial on Facebook  © 2016 Synagogue Memorial"