The cemetery in Schüttorf
The Jüdische cemetery of Schüttorf is located at the Samernsche Strasse in a small forest. It was used in the 17th century for burials. It still has 19 gravestones today. Jews settled in Schüttorf probably as early as 1700. The community always had only a few Jewish families. They belonged to the synagogue community of Bad Bentheim.
The cemetery in Zittau
There are 50 gravestones in the cemetery. The memorial stone was erected by Mottel Schwarz, a survivor of the Shoah.
The cemetery is located on Görlitzer Straße (B 99), on the northöeastern edge of the city. Coming from Görlitz you cross a traffic circle with the turnoff to the B178 (to Löbau and Bautzen). Immediately behind it on the right (western) side of the road is the cemetery.
The cemetery of Schermbeck
A Jewish cemetery must have existed in Schermbeck already in the middle of the 17th century, in the church records of the Protestant church several Jews are mentioned who were buried in Schermbeck.
It is not clear whether it was the same cemetery that exists today at the „Bösenberg“. The present cemetery is located in a residential area. There are 31 rather plain stones, also two memorial stones for people who were murdered in camps.
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.
The cemetery of Wolgast
The former cemetery on the property ‚Am Paschenberg’ 5, next to the district hospital is no longer recognizable as such: dense tree population and ivy growth, only in the rearmost area is an upright (grave?) -Stone fragment to make out, possibly other fragments lie on the ground under the ivy. Towards the street it has a completely rusted, half decayed lattice gate. It is questionable whether this was really a Jewish cemetery.
The cemetery is neglected.
The cemetery of Ueckermünde
Already in 1821, a first cemetery had been established not far from today's memorial site, in 1867 a new, larger one was opened.
The cemetery was destroyed in 1938 and restored after 1960 as a memorial site.
The cemetery of Friedland
There was probably an old cemetery, which fell victim to construction work, the beginnings of which are not known, and which was replaced by the current one around 1904.
The Jewish cemetery is located within the general cemetery, opposite the main entrance in its rear part. It is separated from it by a wire mesh fence, the gate is unlocked. At the time of its use it had its own gate to the dirt road behind the cemetery. About 20 gravestones stand on the well-kept grounds.
The cemetery in Schwanenberg
The Schwanenberg Jewish Cemetery is located at the end of the village of Lentholt, a hamlet that belongs to Schwanenberg, a district of Erkelenz in the district of Heinsberg near Mönchengladbach (North Rhine-Westphalia).
In Schwanenberg there is a Jewish community since the early 19th century. Presumably, however, there were already Jews in the area since the 16th century.
The Jewish cemetery in Bern
There was a cemetery in Bern from the Middle Ages. It was located where the Bundeshaus stands today. The new cemetery was founded in 1884. Today it includes 1800 graves.