Prayer Hall Krefeld Rheinstraße
On 6.12.1964 the Jewish community inaugurated a prayer hall on the corner of Rheinstrasse and Philadelphiastrasse, which provided space for about 130 people. Due to the growth of the Jewish community, the space quickly became too small. Since 1978, the Jewish community had rented rooms on the second floor of the house Wiedstraße 17 for conversion into a prayer hall. This prayer hall could be referred 1981.
Prayer room Krefeld Bismarckstraße
Shortly after the end of the war in 1945, Jewish life in Krefeld revived. About ten Jews joined together to form a (new) Jewish community. The silk manufacturer Fritz Leven became the head of the community. The community initially met in his private house at Bismarckstrasse 118. 116 and 118 belonged to the Jewish community of Krefeld. The community grew again. At the end of the 1960s it had about 120 people. This number remained fairly constant for the following decades.
Prayer room Krefeld Fischeln
From 1848, Fischeln's small Jewish community set up its own prayer room at Marienstraße 37. To hold a service, however, the room could be used only years later, because previously the number of minyan (10 Jewish males are required for a service, otherwise it can not be held) had not been reached.
.Around 1910, at the latest by the beginning of the First World War in 1914, the prayer room was no longer used.
"Judenpütz"
In the middle of the 20th century, the basement floors of today's Hindenburgstraße 20/22 always showed damp spots after heavy rainfall. When investigating the cause, one came across a hole about 20 meters deep, at the lowest point of which were old wooden planks. According to oral tradition, this is supposed to be a so-called "Judenbrunnen" in earlier times. This was a (non-Jewish) name for a mikveh, a ritual bath in Judaism.
Synagogue Krefeld Mennonite Church Street
On November 9, 1764, the new synagogue was consecrated in what was then Juden-Kirch-Straße 44, now Mennonitenkirchstraße.
Before that, the service had been held in the house of Krefeld's Mendel Meyer ab, which today, unfortunately, can no longer be located exactly.
The first leader of the community was Baer Abraham Onderich from Metz. For this synagogue, the banker Isaac Meyer donated ten years later a bench for cultic purposes (circumcision), which is preserved to this day and is with the Jewish community in Krefeld.
Synagogue Krefeld Wiedstraße
Since 1978, the Jewish community had rented premises on the second floor of the house Wiedstraße 17 for conversion into a prayer hall. This prayer room could be occupied in 1981. By the growing number of members of the congregation the place was hardly sufficient already in the 1990s.
Mikvah in the Jewish Community Center Krefeld
see description "Jewish community center" and "Krefeld synagogue".
Jewish Community Center Krefeld
On the initiative of the then Lord Mayor Dieter Pützhofen and
of the Jewish community had been 1998 the association donation Dr. Isidor
.
Hirschfelder had been founded. This association had and has among other things the
Task to establish a Jewish community center in Krefeld, the
Jewish culture in the Lower Rhine to promote and the Jewish history at the
Lower Rhine to promote.
Jewish Community Center Mönchengladbach
The reconstruction of Gladbach's Jewish community began as early as the summer of 1945. The driving force behind this was Kurt Hecht, who returned to his homeland after his imprisonment in a concentration camp in Mechelen and became chairman of the community for many years.
The Jewish community of Mönchengladbach today also includes the districts of Viersen, Erkelenz, Heinsberg and Grevenbroich. By the end of the 1960s, the community had grown to 120 people. Due to the influx of many Jews from the former Soviet territories in the 1990s, the community continued to grow.
Old Jewish cemetery Krefeld
The first mention of the old Jewish cemetery on Heideckerstrasse dates back to 1723. The Jewish community had initially leased the site before acquiring it in 1744 through the then community leader Hertz Levi.
Already in the course of the 18th century- or at the beginning of the 19th century, the first extensions of the cemetery took place. In 1854, the next expansion took place with the acquisition of the land adjacent to the north side of the burial ground.
Sometime between the years 1883 and 1889, the burial hall, which still stands today, was built in the cemetery.