Leipzig, Germany

Members of the Boys were born in Leipzig in Germany.

The Boys were teenage and child-Holocaust survivors, who were brought to the UK after the war for rest and rehabilitation.

Members of the Boys were held in Nazi labour and concentration camps and used as slave labourers. They had also survived World War II in hiding or as lone children.

Old Postcard of Leipzig Town Hall, 1900.

Old Postcard of Leipzig Town Hall, 1900.

Leipzig, in the German state of Saxony, has had a Jewish community since the 13th century.

Background
As far back as 1349, the Jews of Leipzig began to face discrimination. They were blamed for the Black Death (1348–1349) and briefly expelled from the city. The establishment of a permanent Jewish community was restricted.

The beginning of the 19th century, however, marked a revival of the Leipzig Jewish community, which became an officially state-recognised organisation in 1847, when Jews were allowed to settle in Leipzig without any restrictions. Towards the end of the 19th century, antisemitism began to intensify but the community continued to grow. By the beginning of the 20th century, there were approximately 6,000 Jewish inhabitants in Leipzig

Third Reich

As a result of the Nazi’s rise to power, Leipzig’s Jewish population decreased. The Schnitzer Family (Joe Carver was originally Joseph Schnitzer) were expelled from Leipzig in the 1938 ‘Polenaktion’ and deported to Poland. His parents were Polish born Jews who were living and working in Germany. The deportation led to the Kristallnacht pogrom, after which 553 Jewish men were arrested.

The German Reich completed a population census on May 19, 1939, in which they determined that 0.5% of Leipzig’s citizens were Jewish: 4,470 were Jews by descent and 4,113 by religion.

In mid-1938, Jews were first banned from using park benches in the Rosenthal Park. By the end of the year, Jews were banned from all public parks in the city.

Deportations

Synagogue Memorial Leipzig

The deportations of German-Jewish citizens from Leipzig began on 21 January 1942 and lasted until 13 February 1945, when the last 220 Jews were deported to Theresienstadt. In total, about 2,000 Jews were deported from Leipzig.

Aftermath

By 1945 there were only 15 Jews remaining in the city at which point 200 came back from Theresienstadt to re-establish the Jewish community.

Present-day

Leipzig has the most active Jewish community in central Germany. 

Visiting Leipzig
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Jewish heritage sites in Leipzig

Jewish heritage sites in Leipzig

Leipzig is the largest city in the German federal state of Saxony, with a population of approximately 560.000.

Getting there

Leipzig is easily reached by train from Berlin.

Getting around

The best way to get around is by using the public bike sharing system or the tram.

What to See

Synagogues

Brody Synagogue (Keilstrasse 4) This is the only synagogue in Leipzig to survive the 1938 pogroms because Nazis feared fire would spread to adjacent buildings. It remains the community’s active place of worship and is the hub of the Jewish community.

Memorials

Memorial to the Destroyed Synagogue (Gottschedstrasse) The memorial at the site of the main 19th-century synagogue (Moorish Revival style) was designed by architects Sebastian Helm and Anna Dilengite in 2001, the installation features 140 empty bronze chairs, representing the absence of the vibrant Jewish community. It functions as the city’s Holocaust memorial.

Stolpersteine Numerous brass plaques are embedded in the pavement throughout the city, commemorating victims of the Holocaust at their last known homes.

Cemeteries

Old Jewish Cemetery (Alter Israelitischer Friedhof, Berliner Strasse) Founded 1864.

New Jewish Cemetery (Neuer Israelitischer Friedhof, Delitzscher Strasse) Opened in 1928, it contains significant historical graves and memorials to the deported and murdered Jewish population.

Archives

Anne Frank Shoah Library  (German National Library (Deutsche Bücherei)Deutscher Pl. 1) The collection houses a massive collection of literature on the persecution and murder of German Jews.

Synagogue Memorial Leipzig
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Joe Carver
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