Heerstrasse Jewish Cemetery
Due to the East-West division of the city of Berlin, the Jewish community of Berlin was also divided into East and West. This meant for the Jews in the western part of the city: a new cemetery had to be built. In the north-western part of Grunewald, which here borders on Heerstr., an area of about 3.4 hectares was purchased in 1955 for the construction of a cemetery. This was consecrated in 1956 and until today über 5.000 burials took place here.
Berlin, Grosse Hamburger Strasse
Only a memorial plaque, the restored grave of Moses Mendelssohn and some exhibited historic gravestones reminds today of this Jewish cemetery and its destruction by the National Socialists.After the Judenkiewer Spandau (1314 documentary mentioned)[see link], the Jewish cemetery in Berlin-Mitte is the älteste of the Berlin Jewish community. Today located in the center of the city, the cemetery was established and consecrated in 1672, well before the site. Exact document numbers are not clearly ascertainable.
Leather industry - Adler & Oppenheimer A.-G.
Dilsheimer shoe store
Elfriede Spangenthal (née Brylewski)
Elfriede Brylewski was born in Suhl on April 9, 1906. Her parents were Aron and Emma Brylewski. These were owners of the well-known department store Leschnitzer in Suhl.
Elfriede met and fell in love with her späteren husband at a young age. At the age of 19, Elfriede moved to Eisenach in 1927, after marrying Ludwig.
"New School"
The "Neuschul" was built and used next to the main synagogue ("Altschul") due to the increase of the Jewish population in Fürth. In addition, it had apartments that were rented or leased.
In the 19th century, when under Chief Rabbi Dr. Isaak Loewi the main synagogue was rebuilt and expanded according to the ideas of Reform Judaism, the "Neuschul" continued to be used by the Orthodox community members as a community synagogue.
former Jewish dwelling house with remains of a mikveh
three-storey and gable-roofed gable-roofed building with half-timbered upper storey and aborter bay, in the core around 1400; remains of a mikvah
former Jewish residence
three-story and eaves tails roof building with medieval core