


The Birnbaum family lived at Löherstraße 10 in Fulda. Abraham and Frieda Birnbaum had three children: Moshe (b. 1928), Salomon (b. 1933) and Gustel (b. 1934). Abraham Birnbaum was arrested and taken to the Buchenwald concentration camp in 1939. He died there in 1941.
Freida Birnbaum and her children were deported to Riga on a transport from Kassel that left on 8 December 1941. Freida and Salomon are believed to have died in Auschwitz in 1943. Gustel Birnbaum survived the war but died in July 1945. She was 12 years old.Â
Moshe Birnbaum was the sole survivor of his family. To find out more about his life click here.
Aftermath
After World War II most of Hesse-Darmstadt and Hesse-Kassel was included in the new state of Hesse, which in 1970 contained 1,508 Jews in nine communities, the most important being Offenbach, Wiesbaden, Darmstadt, and Kassel, with a joint regional organisation in Frankfurt. At the beginning of the 21st century, after immigration from the former Soviet Union, the population of these four main communities exceeded 3,000.
Getting there The nearest airport is Frankfurt. There are excellent road and rail connections.
Synagogue As of May 2024, archaeologists have begun excavating the site of the destroyed synagogue to create a permanent memorial.
Heritage is preserved through commemorative plaques at the site of the former synagogue and the Old Jewish Cemetery, which was also destroyed by the Nazis and is now a park.