Stumbling blocks in Nuremberg: Memory of the Adelsberger family

Am 15.06.2025 wurden in Nürnberg Stolpersteine für die Familie Adelsberger aus Hockenheim verlegt, um deren Schicksal zu würdigen.
On June 15, 2025, stumbling blocks for the Adelsberger family from Hockenheim were laid in Nuremberg to honor their fate. (Symbolbild/MBW)

Stumbling blocks in Nuremberg: Memory of the Adelsberger family

Hockenheim, Deutschland - On June 15, 2025, a moving stumbling block was relocated in Nuremberg for the Adelsberger family from Hockenheim. With these memorial stones, which are made of brass, the victims of the National Socialist persecution are commemorated. The working group Jewish History Hockenheim had organized the event, and numerous interested goods came to celebrate this important moment. Schwetzinger Zeitung reports that the laid stumbling blocks on Abraham and Clothilde Adelsberg Paul and Sophie remember.

The stumbling blocks can be found in over 1,100 locations and 17 countries in Europe and an initiative by the artist Gunter Demnig. They commemorate the individual fates of Holocaust victims and should keep the memory of their suffering. There are a total of over 45,000 stumbling blocks in Europe, and in Germany there are more than 900 of these plaques. These memorials not only commemorate the terrible events, but also encourage you to think about how we can fight against anti -Semitism and any form of discrimination ( Germany.info ).

The history of the Adelsberger family

Alfred Fass, a descendant of the Adelsberger, recalled in his speech of Abraham Adelsberger, who was born in Hockenheim in 1863. Abraham was a successful businessman who became known as Commercial Councilor and Hop dealer. With his wife Clothilde, who worked in the German Red Cross, he had two children: Paul and Sophie. Her trip began in Hockenheim, where the family operated a large hop magazine before moving to Mannheim and finally to Nuremberg in 1897 ( Stumbling blocks nuremberg ).

In Nuremberg, the couple set up a tin toy factory and put together an important art collection, which included almost 200 paintings and numerous works of art. Unfortunately, the financial descent with the great depression began, and the family had to sell their home in Hockenheim in 1935 due to financial difficulties. With the rise of the National Socialists, the family was exposed to large reprisals and emigrated to the Netherlands in 1939 ( Stumbling blocks nuremberg ).

a sad fate

Clothilde survived the Shoah, but was deported to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1944. Her husband Abraham, who died in Amsterdam in 1940, had lost German citizenship just a few years earlier. The daughter Sophie Isay fought for the memory of her family after the war and thus contributed to the preservation of her history. Alfred Fass emphasized how important it is to keep these memories awake to prevent the repetition of such persecution and discrimination ( Schwetzinger Zeitung ).

The stumbling blocks in Nuremberg are not only reviews of the history of the Adelsberger family, but also stand for the pursuit of justice. "The moral duty to remember," said Fass, a call to everyone, not to tolerate anti -Semeiches thinking and to work for respectful coexistence. It is a strong sign against forgetting and a warning to all of us to raise our voice.

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OrtHockenheim, Deutschland
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