Stumbling block - Pauline (Blümla) Neumaier

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Blümla (Pauline) Neumaier was born in 1860 in Lauchheim. She had ten other siblings and lived in Lauchheim at Hauptstra;e 39. When her parents died, the unmarried Blümla (Pauline) Neumaier and her two sisters Adelheid and Auguste, who were also unmarried, took care of her sister Hanna until she was admitted to the Schussenried sanatorium in 1929. From March 24, 1942, the three sisters lived in Bopfingen-Oberdorf in one of the 6 Jewish houses in which Jews from the Stuttgart area and the surrounding region were forcibly interned from 1939 - 1941 until their deportation beginning in 1941.

Stumbling block - Adelheid Neumaier

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Adelheid Neumaier was born in Lauchheim in 1855. She had ten other siblings and lived in Lauchheim at Hauptstra;e 39.When her parents died, the unmarried Adelheid Neumaier and her two sisters Auguste and Blümla, who were also unmarried, took care of her sister Hanna until she was admitted to the Schussenried sanatorium in 1929. From March 24, 1942, the three sisters lived in Bopfingen-Oberdorf in one of the 6 Jewish houses in which Jews from the Stuttgart area and the surrounding region were forcibly interned from 1939 - 1941 until their deportation beginning in 1941.

Sarstedt - Jewish cemetery Ostertorstraße / Wellenweg

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Cemetery within the city extension; enclosure to the street by brick wall of the 19th century, left gate pillar with inscription "Syn. Gemeinde Sarstedt 1860", right gate pillar provided with a häbräischen inscription, 17 üpredominantly simple gravestones, 19th century to early 20th century. Gravestones partly heavily damaged. In 1994, the cemetery was geschändet.

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Jewish cemetery Teichstraße - Hildesheim

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Since the resettlement of Jews in Hildesheim around the year 1600, there has been an uninterrupted succession of Jewish cemeteries in the city. The cemetery at the Teichstrasse, which is still preserved in parts today, dates from this time. It was extended several times, always in the direction of the stone pit, and at least partially, like Christian cemeteries, it was used as a pasture.

Jewish cemetery Moritzberg

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On the slope of Bergholz, at the end of Bennostra;e, on the edge of the old Bennoburgfeld the partially preserved Jüdische Friedhof of the former village of Moritzberg, where there was a small Jüdische Gemeinde since the 16th century. There are 29 preserved gravestones from 1780 to 1849, most of which have a Hebrew or German inscription, but two have an English inscription. During the Nazi period, the cemetery remained untouched, as its leveling or removal was deemed "not important for the war The gravestones were rearranged and laid horizontally in 1960.

Stumbling block - Hanna Neumaier

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Hanna Neumaier was born in Lauchheim in 1872. She was the tenth of eleven children. The family lived at Hauptstrasse 39. When her parents died, Hanna Neumaier was taken care of by her three unmarried sisters, Auguste, Adelheid and Blommla. In 1929 Hanna Neumaier had to be admitted to the sanatorium in Schussenried. On July 17, 1940, Anna Neumaier was picked up by one of the famous gray buses and transported to Grafeneck. There she lost her life in the gas chamber on the same day. Her urn was buried by her sisters in the Jewish cemetery in Bopfingen-Aufhausen.