"[1905 saw] the inauguration of a new synagogue at 5 Turnerstrasse. The new house of worship not only provided seating for 450 men and 350 women, with separate entrances, but also housed an additional prayer hall for Orthodox Jews from Eastern Europe. There was a Jewish community center next door... On Pogrom Night, rioters set the synagogue and its neighboring administrative building on fire, but not before stealing the Torah scrolls and silverware...A memorial stone, bearing a picture of the destroyed synagogue, was unveiled in 1978." Ruth Martina Trucks

Notes

Sources: 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., Lexikon der jüdischen Gemeinde in Deutschen Sprachraum, Klaus Dieter-Alicke, [publisher] Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 2008., Feuer in dein Heiligtum gelegt: Zerstörte Synagogen 1938 Nordrhein-Westfalen, Michael Brooke [Ed.], Meier Schwarz [foreword], [publisher] Kamp, 1999.

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