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MOHELNICE

HISTORY OF JEWISH COMMUNITY


The oldest recorded mention of a Jewish presence in Mohelnice is from 1322. In this year the Czech king, Jan Lucembursky, granted permission to Konrad, the bishop of Olomouc, to employ Jewish moneylenders in the bishop's towns of Mohelnice, Svitavy, Vyskov and Kromeriz.

It is quite possible that in the following centuries other individual Jews settled in the town, but neither a synagogue nor a Jewish cemetery were established there. Permission from a king, feudal owner or town council was needed to institute a Jewish community. Mohelnice, being the property of the bishops and archbishops of Olomouc, was not granted this permission. Information about the activities of Jewish families, merchants and businessmen began to surface during the mid 19th century due to the considerable increase of Mohelnice Jews. After 1848, a reorganization of the state administration eliminated medieval discriminatory laws and brought equality of rights for Jews in the entire country. They used their newly attained freedom and moved from small, crowded towns and ghettos to bigger industrial towns such was Mohelnice, where they looked for better economic opportunities. The Jewish congregation in Mohelnice was founded in 1870. One of the results of this active group was the foundation of their own prayer room in the town square (the house number 9). The original prayer was located in so called Edelhof (30 Trebovska street). There were four other Jewish houses and stores in the town square before WWII. The nearest synagogues and ritual bath, called mikveh, were located in Lostice and Usov. Jews from Mohelnice kept close contacts with members of the Jewish community in nearby Lostice and Usov. In many cases families from these locations were related.

While around 1850 there were only 13 Jews in the town, during the 2nd half of the 19th century their number rose to almost 200, which represented about 7% of population of the inner town. The Jewish presence started to gradually decline after 1900. Shortly after the creation of the Czechoslovak Republic about 90 Jews resided in Mohelnice, and around 1930 only 40 of them remained. Almost all of the Jews left the town in 1938 to save their lives and property from the Nazis who occupied the Sudetenland in the fall of that year. Jewish people from Mohelnice escaped to that part of the Republic, which was not occupied by the German army. Only a few elderly and ailing persons of Jewish faith stayed behind.

In November 1938, a few weeks after the Munich pogrom, the Nazis organized a big anti Jewish pogrom in the rest of Germany and Sudetenland during which hundreds of synagogues and thousands of Jewish stores, houses and apartments were destroyed. This pogrom, called by the Nazis, ”The Crystal Night”, due to the sound of breaking windows, also found its way to Mohelnice. Several fanatics attacked Jewish dwellings and ransacked the prayer room.

The Jewish congregation was not renewed after the war. There are about 15 Jewish tombstones in the main Mohelnice cemetery. One of them bears the name of Erwin Ziegler who perished in Buchenwald in 1944. There is also a mass grave for the Russian prisoners of war – victims of a death transport from Auschwitz. Among the citizens of Jewish descent from Mohelnice, who joined the anti-Nazi armed forces and fought on the Western front until the end of the war, were the Grätzer brothers, J. Mandl, Edgar, Charlotte and Otmar Ziegler and Artur Langer. A student of medicine, Kurt Wolf, escaped to the Soviet Union and became a member of the Czechoslovak army unit there. During the battle by Sokolovo he was killed on March 9, 1943. Kurt was posthumously promoted to lieutenant, received a doctorate and was awarded the Order of Red Flag, the Order of the White Lion with the star and the Czechoslovak War Cross 1939.

JEWISH STORES AND THE PRAYER ROOM IN THE MOHELNICE TOWN SQUARE - MOHELNICE CIRCA 1915

JEWISH STORES AND THE PRAYER ROOM IN THE MOHELNICE TOWN SQUARE - MOHELNICE CIRCA 1915
Houses from the left: 1. Textile Store – owned by M. Moller, 3. Jewish Prayer Room, 5. Textile Store – owned by Süss family

The Süss Family left Mohelnice before WWII. Mr. Ludwig Moller and his sister Greta stayed and they perished in a concentration camp.

News:

September 2008: September 2008


July 2008 July 2008


Červen 2008: Theatre performance CHAHA in the Lostice synagogue


June 2008: Opening of the Usov Synagogue


May 2008: Educational program, Klopina Elementary School


During 2007 the Foundation Respect and Tolerance created a new website and put together education programs on DVD and CD titled „Remembering Jewish Families from Lostice, Mohelnice and Usov”. Programs were produced tanks to the financial assistance from the Foundation for Holocaust Victims in Prague and are available to students free of charge.


31.12.2007: PF 2008


31.12.2007: Summary of activities 2007 - file size 3MB


26.06.2007: Warning anniversary


16.06.2007: Berta Horova


10.05.2007: Respect and Tolerance gives books about the Holocaust to schools


05.05.2007: Project - Books for the University


01.05.2007: Fanny Neuda and Dinah Berland - New edition of a book which originated in Lostice in 19th century


19.04.2007: Lostice synagogue


16.04.2007: March of the Living


23.03.2007: Exhibition in London


26.01.2007: Terry Haass Prize 2007


20.01.2007: Artur Langer


01.05.2006: Bar mitzvah



Summary of activities:

9.12.2006: There is RaT summary of activities and programs 2006 in PDF format, here


© 2007 Developed by Jaroslav Brachtl AFirma.cz