Timeline
Timeline
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Racist and antisemitic claims that “foreigners” and “Jews” were to blame for the housing shortage become a recurring theme in the 1920s.
Antisemitic pamphlet, 1924. Source: Private collection, Berlin
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January
With over 160,000 members, the Berlin Jewish Community is by far the largest in Germany.
The office of the Prussian Association of Jewish Communities, 1935, photo: Herbert Sonnenfeld. Source: Jüdisches Museum Berlin FOT 88/500/160/013 -
February/March
Jews and political undesirables are arbitrarily arrested and attacked in the first weeks of Nazi rule.
An unnamed man being taken away by a policeman, 1933, photo: Gunnar Lundh. Source: Nordiska Museet, Stockholm -
1. April
Stores in Berlin’s main shopping streets are hit by a nationwide boycott of Jewish businesses, medical practices and law offices.
A SA march staged for the press on Leipziger Straße, Berlin, April 1, 1933, photographer unknown. Source: Collection Haney/DHM
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May 29
Berlin’s Jewish Community protests the continuing discrimination and increasing number of antisemitic measures to the Berlin State Commissioner – without success.
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From June 15 on
Gauleiter of Berlin and Brandenburg Joseph Goebbels organizes attacks on Jews.
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Summer
The antisemitic weekly Der Stürmer opens new headquarters in Berlin: Display cases appear across the city.
Stürmer display in Schmöckwitz, 1935. Source: Sammlung Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz -
September 15
The Nuremberg race laws come into force. The first regulation under the Reich Citizenship Law stipulates who is to be defined as Jewish. Jews no longer have the same legal status as other citizens.
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End of the year
Several municipal housing associations in Berlin terminate their rental contracts with Jewish tenants of small apartments as of January 1, 1936, or April 1, 1936.
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Autumn/Winter
Poverty and destitution among Jewish people continue to rise. The Jewish Community collects donations to help the worst affected through the winter.
The launch of Jewish winter relief in the synagogue on Prinzregentenstraße, October 11, 1936, photo: Herbert Sonnenfeld. Source: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, Inv.-No. FOT 88/500/230/001
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30. Januar
Albert Speer is appointed General Building Inspector of the Reich Capital Berlin (GBI).
Plans to rebuild Berlin as “World Capital Germania” involved the demolition of several thousand homes, c. 1937, photo: Karl Werner Gullers. Source: Nordiska Museet, Stockholm -
July
The Treptow housing cooperative terminates all rental contracts with Jewish tenants.
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September 1
Several public housing associations and cooperatives ask their Jewish tenants to vacate their homes, to “reduce the strain” on the non-Jewish tenants.
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Data on Jewish people are increasingly collected. Among the offices keeping precise records is the Nazi welfare service (NSV).
NSV register for Hermannstraße 220, noting “Jewish” residents, c. 1938/39. Source: Landesarchiv Berlin, A Rep. Nr. 244-03 No. 223 -
From June 4
Antisemitic attacks carried out across Berlin on Jewish businesses and their owners.
Adolf Brünn Nachf. furniture store in Weißensee, June 1938, photo: Hans Spieldoch. Source: Stiftung neue Synagoge Berlin – Centrum Judaicum, CJA, 7.103,3 -
June 14
Under the third regulation of the Reich Citizenship Law, Jewish businesses must register with the authorities. At the time, there are still around 50,000 Jewish-run businesses in Berlin.
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August 17/18
Jewish Germans who do not have “recognized Jewish” first names are required to officially take the additional name Israel or Sara as of January 1, 1939.
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Mid-September
Charlottenburg district court dismisses an action brought by Jewish tenants against Berlin housing associations, thus approving the evictions.
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September 14
GBI Albert Speer proposes the idea of housing tenants whose homes are due for demolition in apartments occupied by Jews – and forcing the Jewish Berliners out of their homes. The GBI starts holding records on large apartments occupied by Jewish tenants.
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October 28
Some 1,500 Jewish people from Poland are expelled from Berlin to the German-Polish border. Thousands are deported.
Expelled Jews in Zbąszyń, 1938, photographer unknown. Source: Yad Vashem, 2656/18 -
November 7-12
Gauleiter of Berlin Joseph Goebbels organizes a nationwide, anti-Jewish pogrom. The SA, SS, and their accomplices destroy homes, businesses, and synagogues. The extent of the damage, or number of Berlin Jews injured, remains unclear.
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Es ist unbekannt, wie viele Wohnungen von Jüdinnen und Juden überfallen werden, auch Fotos aus Berlin sind nicht überliefert.
A photo taken in Mannheim shows the extent of the devastation, 1938, photo: Henry (Heinz) Bauer. Source: Courtesy of the Museum of Jewish Heritage, New York - A Living Memorial to the Holocaust. Gift of Henry Bauer in memory of Irma, Ludwig, and Werner Bauer, 1900.90 -
November 12
Nazi officials meet in the Ministry of Aviation to discuss where to house Jews. Reinhard Heydrich, head of the security police and the Nazi intelligence organization SD, opposes the idea of ghettos in German cities, fearing they would be too hard to control.
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November/December
Jewish businesses in Berlin are forced to sell up below value or close down. Countless Jewish people are thus deprived of their livelihoods.
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December 28
Hermann Göring decrees the segregation of Jews in ‘Jew houses.’ Hitler had charged Göring with organizing and coordinating the persecution of Jews after the pogrom. .
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February 8
Homes and business premises let to Jewish tenants by non-Jewish landlords must be registered with the authorities – in Berlin by the Redevelopment of the Reich Capital’s implementing body under the GBI. The GBI decides who can move into vacant ‘Jew homes.’
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April 30
The Law on Tenancy with Jews comes into force. It abolishes tenant protection for Jews with non-Jewish landlords and allows local authorities to allocate rooms to Jewish people in the homes of other Jews.
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Spring
The Berlin Jewish Community sets up the housing advice office under the direction of Dr. Martha Mosse.
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19. Mai
All rooms let to Jewish people now need to be officially registered, i.e., Jewish landlords also need to notify the authorities of their Jewish tenants.
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May
A national census is carried out; data on Jews are separately collected. According to these, 82,457 people live in Berlin who are classified as Jewish under the Nuremberg race laws.
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July 4
The Reich Association of Jews in Germany is founded. Membership is compulsory for all Jewish Communities and their members.
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September 1
Nazi Germany invades Poland and World War II breaks out. The chances for Jews to leave Germany diminish.
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End of the year
The outbreak of war brings residential construction in Berlin to a standstill, worsening the housing shortage. Support grows for the idea of ousting Jewish tenants from their homes to make way for non-Jews.
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February
Jews are expelled from East Frisia; many come to Berlin. They join many other Jewish people who came to Berlin in preceding years to escape antisemitism in smaller towns and villages.
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April 24
The Reich Security Main Office prohibits all male and female German Jews who are “fit for military service or work assignment” from emigrating to other European countries and especially to “enemy states” in Europe.
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July 4
Another regulation introduced in Berlin: Jews may only go shopping between 4 pm and 5 pm.
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July 31
The Berlin telephone exchange cuts off all connections to private Jewish households.
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September 1
Some 80,000 Berlin Jews have emigrated abroad since 1933.
A train leaving Anhalter Bahnhof station, taking young Jewish emigrants heading via Marseille for Palestine, September 1, 1936, photo: Herbert Sonnenfeld. Quelle: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, FOT 88/500/106/015 -
September 10
Tenant protection for Jewish tenants in Jewish-owned properties is revoked in Berlin, Munich, and Vienna.
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September 21
A regulation is issued demanding separate air shelters in buildings housing Jewish and non-Jewish residents.
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October
Jews are assigned forced labor across the German Reich. Jews in Berlin are especially badly hit; many are made to work in the arms industry.
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January
There are just over 70,000 Jewish people still living in Berlin.
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January to October
During the GBI’s “1st action” in Berlin, at least 2,000 “Jew homes” owned by non-Jews are “vacated”. The Jewish tenants are given six weeks’ notice to move out. The vacant apartments are let to non-Jewish people with certificates of eligibility for publicly supported housing.
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April 1
The Berlin Jewish Community is required to change its name to “Jüdische Kultusvereinigung zu Berlin e.V.” (“Jewish Religious Association Berlin, registered society”).
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May to July
During the GBI’s “2nd action” in Berlin, 1,000 “Jew homes” are vacated. This time the Jewish tenants are given no more than two weeks’ notice to leave.
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August
More forced laborers are enlisted: All Jewish men up to the age of 60 and all Jewish women up to the age of 55 are now required to perform forced labor. 26,000 to 28,000 Jewish people are employed as forced laborers in Berlin.
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The GBI’s “3rd action” starts. The occupants of some 5,000 “Jew homes” are hit. Because the letters of notification resemble those issued in the previous actions, the recipients expect to be allocated new housing. But some of them are deported instead.
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September
Jews are required to wear a yellow star in public. The cloth stars are to be purchased from the Jewish Community at a price of RM 0.10.
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October 18
The deportations from Berlin begin: The first train, transporting about 1,000 Berlin Jews, goes to the Łódź ghetto. There are no known photos of the deportations from Berlin.
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December 1
Jewish people are prohibited from selling, gifting, or leasing their mobile assets, such as furniture and jewelry.
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December
The Jewish cemetery office registers 267 suicides in 1941. 79 of them occurred in October, when the deportations began. The actual number is likely to be far higher.
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January 20
The day the “Final Solution to the Jewish Question” is discussed in Wannsee, a GBI official points out the advantages of taking over “Jew homes”.
The day Nazi officials meet at Wannsee to discuss the “final solution to the Jewish question”, a GBI official talks about the advantages of taking over “Jew homes”. Source: Privatsammlung, Berlin -
March 24
The Reich Ministry of the Interior prohibits Jews, with a very few exceptions, from using inner-city public transport.
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May 15
Jews are banned from keeping pets. They are given until May 20 to register pets for collection.
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June
The deportations of predominantly elderly people to the Theresienstadt ghetto begin.
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Mid-June
The secret state police (Gestapo) order Jewish people to hand in items in their possession such as cameras, typewriters, and hotplates.
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August
The last remaining residents of Jewish old people’s homes in Berlin are deported.
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March
The Berlin Jewish Community’s housing advice office now employs 40 members of staff.
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March 26
Reinhard Heydrich, head of the Reich Security Main Office, rules that the homes of Jewish people must be marked out by a white paper “Jew star” on the door.
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November
Alois Brunner, a close associate of Adolf Eichmann, organizer of the deportations, takes over the Berlin Gestapo’s “Jew Department” for a time. More Jewish people are now deported straight from “Jew houses,” sometimes during raids on whole buildings or streets.
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December
The Berlin Jewish Community’s housing advice office is renamed “housing office for migration preparation.”
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End of the year
The administration of the Weißensee Jewish cemetery registers 823 suicides, the highest number in one year so far.
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January
Some 33,000 people who are classified Jewish under the Nuremberg race laws still live in Berlin. 15,100 of them are made to perform forced labor.
Margarete Kuttner was also made to perform forced labor. Her daughter took this photo on Uhlandstraße with a self-timer before going into hiding, 1943, photo: Annegret Kuttner. Source: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, Inv.-No. R-2000/144/10, donated by Paul Kuttner -
February 27 to March 5
During the Nazis’ so-called “factory action”, the remaining Jewish forced laborers are collected from Berlin’s armaments factories and deported within a few days to Auschwitz concentration camp.
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March
The mass deportations from Berlin come to an end. Subsequently, most deportees are Jewish Community staff members – or people living underground who were caught by the Gestapo. Most Jews in “mixed marriages”, i.e., with a non-Jewish spouse, remain exempt from deportation.
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Last months of the war
A few forced lodgings continue to exist until the end of the war, inhabited mainly by people in “mixed marriages” and Jewish people “of mixed blood”.
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2. Mai
The Jewish Community estimates that by the end of the war, some 6,000 to 8,000 Jewish people were living in Berlin: 4,000 were partners in “mixed marriages”; 1,900 were former prisoners who had returned from camps and ghettos (mainly Theresienstadt), and 1,400 had survived in hiding.
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