Wittlich Synagogue


The Wittlich Synagogue was a synagogue built in 1909–10 in Wittlich, Germany. The restored building still stands and is located on Himmeroder Straße 44.

History

The Jewish community in Wittlich had previously used a smaller synagogue at Himmeroder Straße 8, which fell into disrepair.
Subsequently, the current synagogue was erected on the same street according to the designs of architect Johannes Vieknen.
The synagogue was consecrated in November 1910 by chief rabbi Jakob Baßfreund of Trier.

Under Nazi rule

During Kristallnacht in November 1938, the interior of the synagogue was destroyed by the Sturmabteilung and others. The city of Wittlich bought the building the following year and used it as a prisoner of war camp throughout World War II. Around 250 Jews were forced out of Wittlich, with the last deportation taking place in 1942. Ultimately, a third of the Jewish community of Wittlich was murdered in Nazi concentration camps. None of the survivors returned to Wittlich after the war, rendering the synagogue without a congregation.

Architecture

The exterior of the synagogue remains largely unchanged from 1910. The interior comprised a prayer hall for men, a slim torah ark facing toward the east, and galleries for women on three sides. Typically for the period, the decor combined elements of German art nouveau with touches of neo-romanticism, as with the painted ornamentation surrounding the ark and the sanctuary lamp. This ornamentation was later restored from surviving drawings and the faded remains. The former torah ark was resurrected as a memorial in front of the building.

Memorial

A commemorative plaque in the former torah ark contains inscriptions in Hebrew:
and German:

Present day

After 1975, the city of Wittlich restored the former synagogue. Today the building functions as a cultural and conference center with a permanent exhibition on Jewish life in Wittlich.