A Conversation with Dr. Dave Tell and Angelika Rieber

Find the link to the video in our news section.


Press release

In the News section you’ll know find an english version of the press release of the Project Jewish Life in Frankfurt considering the first encounter of the participants and the representatives of the participating schools of Frankfurt on june 27th.


Visit program 2023:
At the end of June 2023, a group of children and grandchildren of former Frankfurters will once again visit the former home of their ancestors as guests of the city.
For the 2022 visit program, see here.


The Newsletter July 2022 has been published.


Visit program 2022 – “Together we we still have much work to do!”

“Together we still have much work to do!”, with this appeal for the future, Wendy Schmelzer summed up the conclusion of her visit during her speech at the final reception in Frankfurt’s Römer. She was part of a group of children and grandchildren of former Frankfurter citizens who were guests in the former home of their parents and grandparents from 8th to 15th June at the invitation of the City of Frankfurt.
More about the visit program 2022 you`ll find under this Link.


The “Newsletter September 2021 has been published.



Visiting Program 2019
In June a group of former citizens of Frankfurt and their descendants were invited to the city of Frankfurt, the former home of their parents or grandparents. The invitation of the city gave them the opportunity to see the sites of the grandparents`childhood and youth, visit their houses, the area they lived in, the graves of relatives and former schools. Reports and Pictures


Report about the visit of Renata Harris to commemorate the Kindertransporte , which saved up to 20 000 children 80 years ago here
Further Information


Frank Felsenstein writes in The Times of Israel about his visit to Frankfurt.



Booklaunch: Rettet wenigstens die Kinder
The project has collected several biographies of former visitors who were saved by the Kindertransport. 20 of these biographies have now been published in a book: More information and reviews here


On the History of the Project
Jewish Life in Frankfurt see the new rex_article_content at About us

News

Video: A conversation with Angela Rieber and Dr. Dave Tell (June 2023)

Here you can find the video of a conversation with Angela Rieber and D. Dave Tell during the conference “Widen the Circle” in Berlin, june 18th 2023.


Press release

On june 27th 2023 the first meeting of encounter between this years participants of the visiting program and the representatives of the participating schools of Frankfurt takes place. Here you can read the full press release.


Obiutary Walter Sommers

On February 18, 2022, Walter Sommers’ heart stopped beating. His life exemplifies what it meant to be discriminated against and persecuted, to have to leave one’s homeland and everything that was built up there. On the one hand, it shows how difficult the new beginning was, but also impressively the strength that the emigrants have developed in shaping their new lives. It is admirable how Walter engaged not only within the family, but also in his environment, in order to contribute to a better world through his own experiences. For his family, see the entry on his son Ron Sommers .
Obiutary Walter Sommers


Visiting program 2019

(You can enlarge the following images by clicking on them.)

I am a Frankfurter

Meetings with the descendants of persecuted former Frankfurt citizens


From 12 till 19, June 2019, a group of ex-Frankfurters and their children and grandchildren visited the former homeland or ancestral home as guests of the city.


Since 1980, the city has been inviting former citizens, who were persecuted and expelled during the National Socialist era on account of their origin, their religion or their political views, to stay here.
In 2012, their children have been invited to participate in this program. They know the former hometown of the ancestors especially through stories of their parents and grandparents. The invitation from the city gave them the opportunity to visit the places of childhood and youth of (grand) parents: the house, the living environment, the former schools and the graves of relatives.
For many of the guests, the visit of the Philanthropin, the Jewish school, was of the utmost importance, since their parents or they themselves went to this school. Werner Rothschild, born in Frankfurt in 1928, was a student there until he had to flee Germany in 1939. His parents also taught in the Philanthropin, so did Max Seelig, grandfather of Lois Gilman, another visitor.

The association Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt (Project Jewish Life in Frankfurt) supports the research of visitors in their ancestral home since the mid-1980s. So the visitors are able to research the history of families. Members of the project help to establish contacts with archives or local initiatives and accompany the visitors to the addresses or places of origin of parents or grandparents throughout Hessia and beyond. The volunteers of the project group, who organize and accompany these encounters, work closely together with the city of Frankfurt to prepare the meetings.


Read the complete report at the PDF

Report visiting program 2019PDF
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Visiting program 2019

Family Ehrenfeld / department store F. Ehrenfeld

Visitors: Jill Enfield, Rick Enfield and Gwen Pearl

The father of Jill, Rick and Gwen, Kurt Ehrenfeld (born 1921), came from Frankfurt. He was a former student of the Musterschule and classmate of Walter Sommer (for texts about the Sommer family, see links below). Kurt’s brother Paul (born in 1924) first went to the Hassel’sche Institut, a private school, and later went to the Philanthropin. The family lived in Stettenstraße 4 in Frankfurt and owned a summer house in Königstein-Falkenstein.

The grandparents, Hans and Alice Ehrenfeld, owned a department store in Frankfurt called F. Ehrenfeld on the Zeil 104 (later Schneider, today Myzeil), together with his brother Gustav and his wife Malwina Ehrenfeld. The father of the two brothers, Ferdinand Ehrenfeld, had founded the department store in 1874. After his death in 1910, the widow and two sons Hans and Gustav took over the business.

Read the complete report at the PDF

Family EhrenfeldPDF
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Kindertransport

Several participants of the past visiting programs were rescued by the Kindertransport. We therefore initiated a project for a Kindertransport memorial in Frankfurt inspired by Renata Harris a former visitor who escaped on 26 August 1938 on one of the last Kindertransports. To commemorate the 80thanniversary of the first Kindertransport to England in 1938 the PJLF organized an evening on February 20 with recitals of biographies and music. Two eye-witness accounts with Renata Harris took place at schools. One of them was at Renata Harris’ former school Philanthropin.

Meanwhile the city council has passed a resolution to build the memorial in vicinity of the Central train station.

Book launch – Rettet wenigstens die Kinder

The project has collected several biographies of former visitors who were saved by the Kindertransport. We are very happy, that 20 of these biographies have now been published in a book: Rettet wenigstens die Kinder (Rescue the children now).

The booklaunch took place on 20 November in the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek. The interest was overwhelming and nearly 400 people came to the event. The opening speeches were delivered among others by the councilwoman Silvia Weber, which shows how important the book and the memorial project are for the City of Frankfurt.

The program consisted of readings by authors of the book and a discussion panel with the family of Elisabeth Reinhuber who with her brother was sent with the Kindertransport to England.

She returned to Germany in the fifties. The musical performance of her son (piano) and grandson (baritone) was especially moving.


refuge – Stories of the Selfhelp Home

On October,1st 2018 Ethan Bensinger from Chicago showed his film refuge – Stories of the Selfhelp Home in the Evangelische Akademie in Frankfurt. The film portrays six holocaust survivors who now live in a retirement home and their stories of escape and exile.

It was his third visit to Frankfurt and in all likelihood he is going to continue to come to Frankfurt.
The biography of Ethan Bensinger and his family can be found here
Information about his film here


Visiting Program 2018

(You can enlarge the following images by clicking on them.)

In the first week in May 2018 (2nd – May 9th), former Jewish citizen of Frankfurt and their descendants visited Frankfurt, their former home town, following an invitation of the City of Frankfurt. They visited places they remembered or that their parents had told them about. At the same time they discovered contemporary Frankfurt and met its inhabitants.

They learned about the manner in which Frankfurt today actively reflects and confronts its past while touring several memorials and the new permanent exhibition of the German National Library “Exile. Experience and Testimony. 1933 to 1945”. Among the memorials they visited was the site of the destroyed synagogue on the Friedberger Anlage, where today a museum shows the life of the former Jewish Frankfurt Eastend. They visited also the memorial of the ECB where the Jewish citizens of Frankfurt were rounded up before they were deported to the East in 1941-45 and the memorial wall with the names of all deported Jews from Frankfurt at the Börneplatz. The Westend Synagogue and the Philanthropin are institutions which give evidence of Jewish life today.

Almost all visitors participated in school talks. This year following schools took part: Anne-Frank-Schule, Carlo-Mierendorff-Schule, Elisabethen-Schule, Ernst-Reuter-Schule I and II, the European School, Friedrich-Dessauer-Gymnasium, Heinrich-von-Gagern-Gymnasium, Hostato-Schule in Höchst, Liebig-Schule, Musterschule, Nell- Breuning-Schule in Rödermark and the Ziehenschule.

We thank everyone involved for their dedicated work and preparation of the school visits. Visitors, teachers and students were profoundly touched and enjoyed the rich learning experience.

Visiting Program 2018 – Press coverage:

Visiting Program 2018: Articles on school websites that had invited former inhabitants of Frankfurt or their descendants for talks:

Images of the visit 2018:
You can enlarge the following images by clicking on them.

Get-Together, in the German National Library. Dr. Silvia Asmus presents the the new exhibition of the German Exile Archive. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Welcome address by Angelika Rieber, the chairwoman of the Project Jewish Life in Frankfurt, who introduced the project. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Welcome address by Dietre Sauerhoff from the State Education Authority in Frankfurt am Main. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

First encounters between the guests of the visiting program and students from Frankfurt schools. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Making arrangements for the school talks with the guests of the visiting program. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Making arrangements for the school talks with the guests of the visiting program. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Conversations. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Jorge Baden at the Football Stadium wearing a scarf commemorating the jewish Player of the Club “Eintracht”, Max Girgulski. Photo: Till Lieberz-Groß.

In the Palmengarten: Jorge and Marion Baden, René Baden with her son and daughter in law and Sharon Pretto Katz. Photo: Till Lieberz-Groß.


“That was the last time I saw mother”

Memories of the Kindertransport in Frankfurt February 20th to 22nd.
Renata Harris visits Frankfurt for the anniversary of the Kindertransporte.

From February 20. -22.2018 Renata Harris visited her former hometown Frankfurt, which she left on August 26th, 1939 at the age of 10 on one of the last Kindertransports.
She was invited by the Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt (PJLF), a group of volunteers who are dedicated to researching the lives of persecuted Jewish families from Frankfurt. A number of these families could save their children with the help of the Kindertransport. To commemorate the 80th anniversary of the first Kindertransport to England in 1938 the PJLF organized an evening with recitals of biographies and music.

The biographies of Benjamin Hirsch, Renata Harris (Adler) and Ken Ward (Karl Robert Würzburger) were read.
The pianist Angelika Nebel played the “Kol Nidre” by Siegfried Würzburger, the father of Ken Ward, in an especially moving rendition.

The interest in Renata Harris´ story could be seen by the fully packed auditorium at the Haus am Dom in the centre of Frankfurt City.

Two eye-witness accounts with Renata Harris took place at Schools in Frankfurt. One of them was at Renata Harris´ former School, the Philanthropin. The students in the schools were impressed by her strength of will and energy despite of the horrific loss of her mother.

The purpose of these events is to promote the idea of building a memorial for the children of the Kindertransport in vicinity of the Central Train Station.

Link to a Report on the website of the Philanthropin

Link to a Report by Elena Butz in the Frankfurter Neuen Presse (March 17th, 2018)

You can find more information about Renata Harris here


Frank Felsenstein

Frank Felsenstein, who participated 2017 in the visting program, writes in The Times of Israel about his visit to Frankfurt. Truncated memories: Berlin and Frankfurt in the afterlives of two Jewish refugee women


Obituary Monica Kingreen

Monica Kingreen, January 10th, 1952 – September 2nd, 2017

With deep sadness we announce the death of Monica Kingreen. For many years she researched local history in Hesse and with her work kept the memory of Jewish life in Hesse alive. Most visitors will have met her during the Visiting Program of the city of Frankfurt. Our prayers and thoughts are with the family at this difficult time.

An extensive tribute of her commitment may be found on the page of the Fritz-Bauer-Institut, where Monica Kingreen worked for many years: Monica Kingreen


Visiting Program 2017

From 9th to 16th May 2017, former Frankfurt citizens and their descendants visited their former hometown at the invitation of the city of Frankfurt. They visited places they remembered or had heard about from their parents/grandparents and met people who live in Frankfurt today.

Their visits to the site of the synagogue at the Friedberger Anlage which was destroyed in 1938, the memorial for the deportations between 1941 and 1945 at the ECB, the memorial site at Börneplatz and the Exile-Archive of the DNB (German National Library) shows Frankfurt´s commitment to not let the past be forgotten.

The Westend Synagogue and the Philanthropin are signs of the vibrant Jewish community in Frankfurt of today. Many of the visitors visited school classes.

We would like to thank all involved for their participation in the school visits. The visitors and also the teachers and students enjoyed the experience.

Visiting Program 2017:
Final speeches in the Kaisersaal

Visiting Program 2017 – Press coverage:

Visiting Program 2017: Articles on school websites that had invited former inhabitants of Frankfurt or their descendants for talks:

Images of the visit 2017:
You can enlarge the following images by clicking on them.

The city´s reception in the Palmengarten. Photo: Angelika Rieber.

Get-Together, in the German National Library. Dr. Silvia Asmus presents the Collection of the German Exile Archive. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Welcome address by Angelika Rieber, the chairwoman of the Project Jewish Life in Frankfurt, who introduced the project and its website. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Welcome address by Christoph Stillemunkes, undersecretary at the Ministry of Education and Culture of Hesse. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Welcome address by Marco Schepers from the State Education Authority in Frankfurt am Main. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

First encounters between the guests of the visiting program and students from Frankfurt schools. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Making arrangements for the school talks with the guests of the visiting program. Photo: PJLF Karl Weisel.

Jaquie Gish talks about the life of her family in Frankfurt. Photo: Laura Radovanović.

After the presentation the students ask questions. Photo: Jovan Uljarevic.

Visitors searching for the name of their mothers on the memorial wall for former Jewish students at the Bettinaschule (former Viktoriaschule). Photo: Dieter Kaufmann.

Searching for graves at the old Jewish cemetery. Photo: Angelika Rieber.

(Translated by Gretel Ghamsharick)


Frankfurt Memorial for Kindertransport

The “Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt” dedicated a week from March 19th to 25th, 2017 to the memory of the children who left Frankfurt on the “Kindertransport” with a series of events.

At the beginning of the week the initiative for a memorial was launched at a luncheon meeting. The eye witnesses Lee Edwards, née Liesel Carlebach (93 years) and Oswald Stein (91 years) were present at this occasion.

Lee Edwards convinced all those present with the words: “ It would be nice to have a memorial in my hometown for the children of the Kindertransport … I personally would not be alive hat it not been for the Kindertransport … And I would ask you to hurry up, because I am 93 years old … “

At the unanimous request of the district council, the municipal authority of the city of Frankfurt had already expressly endorsed the initiative of the “Projekt Jüdisches Leben” for a memorial near the central station. Councillor Stefan Majer who represented the municipality confirmed the “clear, supportive signals” of the city at the luncheon and promised that the “City of Frankfurt with all participating departments” would be involved in the implementation.

Hartmut Schwarz, the manager of the Central Station, who is responsible for the reconstruction of the station square, also “reaffirmed the need to find a solution … with the city and the citizens of the city.”
The eye witnesses furthermore visited schools during this week and talked to students of the Heinrich-von-Gagern-Gymnasium and the Ernst-Reuter-Schule II as well as with students at a teacher´s trainer seminar in Frankfurt.
The “Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt” is planning a corresponding event for the Frankfurt Kindertransport Memorial on 1 December 2017. They hope that by the 80th anniversary of the first “Kindertransport” on 1 December 2018 the city plans will already be very advanced.


 


 

The Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt was presented with the Obermayer Award

The Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt was presented with the Obermayer Award on January 23, 2017 at the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin, the home of the Berlin Parliament.

The Obermayer Awards recognize and encourage individuals and organizations who have raised awareness of a once-vibrant Jewish history and culture in their communities and have forged meaningful relationships with former residents and descendants of those who once lived in their towns. The award program was initiated in 2000 by Dr. Arthur S. Obermayer; the awards are co-sponsored by the Berlin Parliament and given in its elegant plenary chamber.

Acceptance Speech by Angelika Rieber

Press Review:

 


 

Newsletter 2016

The Newsletter 2016 has been published.

 


 

 


 

On June 4th, 2015 Ms. Gretel Merom was awarded the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany

Gretel Merom, née Baum, was born on February 9th 1913 in Frankfurt am Main. In 1934, as a dedicated Zionist she decided to leave National Socialist Germany and emigrate to the Palestinian Territories of that time. Her parents Julie and Norbert Baum were deported on October 19th, 1941 with the first transport from Frankfurt to Lodz / Litzmannstadt. Norbert Baum died there on February 22nd, 1942, his wife a few months later on May 4th, 1942.

In 1987 Gretel Merom visited Frankfurt as a participant of the visitors´ program of the city for former Frankfurt Jews, her brother Rudolf Baum, who emigrated to the USA in 1938, came in 1991. Gretel´s son, Micha Ramati, visited Frankfurt in 2012 searching for traces of his mother´s origins and visited her former school where he met some of her former classmates.

Ambassador Michaelis honored 102-year-old Gretel Merom as an extraordinary woman, who sees her life’s work in informing young Germans about the terrible events in Germany and thus bridge the gap between the terrible events of the Shoah and promote friendship between Israelis and Germans.

(Translated by Gretel Ghamsharick)

 


 

Walter Sommers receives the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany

In recognition of his exceptional services in promoting peace and tolerance among peoples and cultures through Holocaust education an healing history, the President of Germany, Joachim Gauck, has awarded Walter Sommers, a former Frankfurt citizen, who emigrated 1939 to the USA, the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. The medal was presented to Walter Sommers on August 6th, 2016 by Herbert Quelle, the German Consul General in Terre Haute, Indiana/USA, where Walter Sommers lives today.

In 1992 Walter Sommers visited his former hometown at the invitation of the City of Frankfurt. The Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt arranged a visit in his former school, where he spoke with the students about his life story and his family. Since that time, Walter Sommers has become involved as a witness for the history of the Holocaust in Terre Haute. Besides giving testimonials as a witness in schools and universities he also gives lectures in the Candles Museum in Terre Haute / Indiana founded by Eva Kor.

He portrays German-Jewish history and contemporary Germany in an appropriate and multi-faceted manner. By showing a realistic image of Germany away from only negative stereotypes he helps to improve US-German relations.

The Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt congratulates Walter Sommers and his children Nancy und Ron on this well-deserved and prestigious award.

Report in the Tribune Star

Homepage of the German Missions in the United States with further reports, photos and the laudatory speech of Herbert Quelle, the German Consul General in Chicago.

(Translated by Gretel Ghamsharick)

 


 

Visiting Program 2016: Encounters with former Frankfurt residents and their children in May 2016:

End of May a group of former citizens of Frankfurt and their descendants were invited to the city of Frankfurt, the former home of their parents or grandparents. Since 1980, the city invites former citizens who were persecuted and driven away, because of their ethnicity, religion or political affiliation during the time of Nationalsocialism.
The invitation of the city gives the visitors the opportunity to see the sites of the (great)grandparents`childhood and youth, visit the house, the area they lived in, the graves of relatives and former schools.
The Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt supported the visitors tracing the history of their families and offered help, did research, organizds contacts with archives or local initiatives and accompanied the visitors to the their parents´ or grandparents´ place of origin in the state of Hesse.

 

Raymon Grossmann’s final speech in the Kaisersaal, 2016:

We are so diverse – Final speech in the KaisersaalPDF
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Encounters with former Frankfurt residents and their children in May 2016: PDF
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Ministerialrat Stillemunkes’ speech in the German National Library, May 2016

Ministerialrat Stillemunkes' speech in the German National Library, May 2016PDF
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Press reports covering the Visiting Program 2016

Stolperstein für Ex-Eintracht-Spieler
Report in the ‘Frankfurter Rundschau’ May 20th, 2016 covering the Stumblestone Ceremony for Max Girgulski, whose daughter participated at the visiting program

Auf den Spuren der NS-Opfer
Report in the ‘Frankfurter Rundschau’ May 24th, 2016 covering the visit of Mark and Steven Novins at the I.E. Lichtigfeld-Schule

Ein Teller brach und das Schweigen auch
Report in the F.A.Z. June 2nd, 2016 covering the visit of Andreas Rothstein at the Schiller-Schule

Großvaters Spuren
Report in the ‘Jüdischen Allgemeine’ June 9th, 2016 covering the visit of Mark and Steven Novins at the I.E. Lichtigfeld-Schule

Klares Bekenntnis
Report in the ‘Jüdischen Allgemeine’ May 20th, 2016 covering the participation of the guests of the visiting program at the Reception on the occasion of the ‘German-Israeli Friendship Day’ in the Philanthropin

Further Reports:
  • F.A.Z. May 19th, 2016, p. 36: Aus Israel, Kolumbien und Uruguay
    Report covering Welcome Reception of the Visitors by the City of Frankfurt am Main
    in the Palmengarten
  • FR June 7th, 2016, p. R8-R9: Arisierung nach Drehbuch. 1937 wurde die Flesch-Werke AG, ein Frankfurter Chemieunternehmen in jüdischem Besitz, „arisiert“. Nachfahrin Patrice Flesch folgt den Spuren ihrer Familie und eines nie gesühnten Verbrechens.
    Report on the visit of Patrice Flesh und Armin H. Flesch at the Wöhler-Schule:
FR Arisierung nach Drehbuch 7.6.2016PDF
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Visiting Program 2016: Reports on websites of schools covering the talks of participants given at schools

Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt e.V. – der Besuch von Raymon Grossman aus Chicago
Raymon Grossman at the Bettinaschule

Zeitzeugen zu Besuch an der Helene-Lange-Schule
Ruthie und David Sakheim at the Helene-Lange-Schule

Besuch aus Kalifornien – Nachkommen von Opfern des Holocaust an unserer Schule
Mark und Steven Novins at the I.E. Lichtigfeld-Schule

Pictures

You can enlarge the following pictures by clicking on them

Get-Together in the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

Dr. Sylvia Asmus, Head of the German Exile Archive of the German National Library, greets the guests (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

Ministerialrat Stillemunkes, Ministry of Education and Cultural Affairs of Hessen, greets the guests (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel). (Speech)

Angelika Rieber, Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt, greets the guests (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

Our guests speeking with students (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

The Grossmann Family sharing information (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

Charles Scheidt from New York in Frankfurt (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

Sharing memories (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

Family Caro from Argentina in conversation (PJLF. Foto Karl Weisel).

Margaret West prepares with a teacher her encounter with students at the Friedrich-Dessauer-Gymnasium (PJLF. Foto: Karl Weisel).

Gayle Wald talking to students of the Schillerschule (PJLF, Foto A. Rieber).

Andreas Rothstein in the archive of the Schillerschule, where his grandfather was teacher; his mother was student there (PJLF. Foto A. Rieber).

Andreas Rothstein in the Hamannstraße in front of his mother’s house (PJLF. Foto A. Rieber).

Gayle Wald at the cemetery in Heddernheim looking for her great-grandmother’s grave (PJLF. Foto A. Rieber).

Farewell Reception by the City of Frankfurt (PJLF. Foto A. Rieber).

 


 

New biographies January – June 2016

Trudel Grossman
Felix Weil
Mari Schwartzenberg
Family Schwab

 


Visiting Program 2015: Encounters with former Frankfurt residents and their children in June 2015:

Rolf Stuerm’s final speech in the Kaisersaal, 2015:

Rolf Stuerm's final speech in the Kaisersaal, 2015PDF
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Visiting Program 2015: Reports in the ‘Frankfurter Rundschau’, in the ‘Frankfurter Neue Presse’ an in the ‘Höchster Kreisblatt’:

Sie war eine Mitschülerin

Auf Spurensuche nach den Wurzeln

Flucht ist auch heute für viele Realität

Visiting Program 2015: Links to reports on websites of schools:

Kaiserin-Friedrich-Gymnasium

Liebigschule

Helene-Lange-Schule

At the moment, we are in the process of building up and improving this homepage.

School classes startet to work with this website. Their positive feedbacks are encouraging. Many colleagues visited our website in the meantime and gave us constructive suggestions and ideas.

We also take big efforts to complete the english version of this homepage.

Of course, your suggestions how to improve this presentation of our activities is very welcome!

Newsletter 2014 Projekt Jüdisches Leben in Frankfurt PDF
599 kB