- The Jewish Community of Dinxperlo
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The Jewish Community of Dinxperlo
Names mentioned in the article in order of appearance:-
Till the names adoption (1811):-
Jacobus Benjamin the Jew-Sibilla Levi- Abraham Cohen of
Rees-Isaac Hartog Oppenheimer of Dinxperlo- Jacob Aron-
After the names adoption:-
Mozes Israel Fuldauer- Michael Gans- Meijer Mozes
Fuldauer- Philip Mozes Fuldauer- Philip Schwarz- Eli
Heijmans- Wolf Salomon- Mozes Pagrach- H. Pagrach-
Abraham Heilbron-Leeman Heilbron- Philip Fuldauer-
Jeanette Cohen- Salomon Levy de Jong- Isaac Mennist- Chief
Rabbi Levisson- Chief Rabbi L. Wagenaar-
Abraham Fuldauer-Leo Heilbron- Maurits and Frederika
Prins- Benjamin Prins-
Maurits Benjamin Prins- Maurits Philip Prins- Hendrik
Verbeek(mayor of Dinxperlo).
In the 18th century only a few Jews lived in Dinxperlo. In
December 1715 a plaintiff wanted to confiscate the goods
of the Jew Benjamin because of a claim of 70 guilders in
Dutch money that had been borrowed by Benjamin Jacobi in
May 1711. In 1748 Jacobus Benjamin the Jew and his mother
Sibilla Levi lived in a house near the border.
Jewish names appear again in 1800 in the protocols of
Dinxperlo. In the spring of 1800 there was a lawsuit
between Abraham Cohen of Rees and Isaac Hartog Oppenheimer
of Dinxperlo.
In 1810 there lived 27 Jews in Dinxperlo and 15 in
neighboring Werth. Jacob Aron served as gazan. Five family
heads and two bachelors submitted their names and family
names to the Municipality. In 1815 there were only four
names left, mostly poor Jewish families and one bachelor.
Mozes Israel Fuldauer was a licenced merchant and butcher
who obviously was better off than the other families. On
Shabbath the Jews of Dinxpelo and Werth came to his house
to hold a service. Michael Gans who according to the list
of adoption of family names lived in Kalkar in 1812, was
exempted from military service.
Merchants and Butchers
A municipal report mentions the in 1815 ‘licensed’
merchant and butcher Mozes Israel Fuldauer as being "an
industrious and well-behaved man who has obtained credit
through his trade; he is thought to be rather well-to-do,
although burdened with a household consisting of a wife
and six children. His house also contained a room where
the Jews practice their religion. The expenses and upkeep
of all this, as well as of the Rabbi, who costs him every
week 2 guilders and 10 pennies, are at his own expense. On
Sabbath several Jews come to Dinxperlo from Werth in order
to practice their religion, since locally there do not
live enough members as is necessary to hold the services.
Meijer Mozes, son of Israel Fuldauer, was manufacturer by
profession. He had stored rather big supplies of textiles
in his house. During the night of January 2nd, 1837 his
house was burgled and a lot of merchandize was taken. The
burglars presumably escaped via the road to Terborg.
Philip Mozes Fuldauer, also a son of Mozes Israel, was the
first person in Dinxperlo who started some industrial
activities. In 1830 he started a house for dyeing in blue
of textile materials in the town. Fuldauer had married
three times and had 21 children. Apart from Dinxperlo, he
also lived in Winterswijk, Gendringen, Aalten and Terborg.
About the families who lived there during the period of
1812 – 1890 only a few facts have been preserved.The
family name of Schwarz appears around 1880 in legal
documents. Thus, Philip Schwarz, tradesman in Dinxperlo,
took a mortgage on his house , yard and a building plot
from the Geldersche Credietvereniging in Arnhem .
According to the custom in the Achterhoek, auctions of
clothing, textile remnants, household goods and suchlike
were held regularly. On December 22nd, 1887 notary's clerk
Eli Heijmans arrived in Dinxperlo from Groenlo at the
request of the Amsterdam merchant Wolf Salomon in order to
auction off a party of drapery goods. Remnants of cotton
cloth, horse-cloths and other textile goods went very
well. In 1902 Mozes Pagrach received a permit to establish
a beef and veal butchery and in 1906 H. Pagrach received a
permit for the same purpose. Mozes kept his business until
1942, after which the German occupiers took over the
business. In 1903 Abraham Heilbron received a permit to
establish a tannery of cow- and calves hides. In that same
year Leeman Heibron was allowed to run a calf- and beef
butchery.
Philip Fuldauer, a 21-year-old greengrocer, got married in
1908 in the synagogue of Bocholt to 20-year-old Jeanette
Cohen. Philip got tuberculosis and died on October 7th,
1909. Jeanette remarried and later became a well-known
emancipated politician.
The Synagogue
As has been mentioned above, Mozes Fuldauer had a house
synagogue around 1810 for about 20 persons, including Jews
from Werth and as mentioned before, the expenses were on
him as well. The house synagogue was not in the best
condition. Not much is known about this small synagogue.
During the period (of around 1810 to 1830) the Chazan was
Salomon Levy de Jong.
(Some anecdotes on Salomon Levie (de Jong) and his descendants)
In 1850 the Jewish communities of Varsseveld and Dinxperlo
belonged to the secondary synagogue of Aalten. In that
same year these communities paid their contributions for
the Chief Rabbi and the Rabbi of the Department of
Nijmegen to the council of synagogues at Aalten. In the
same year the High Commission in The Hague officially
recognized the Jewish Community in Dinxperlo. In a
committee report of the year 1851 the following is
mentioned: "The Israelites have a tiny synagogue and a
chazzan." In the reports about the condition of the
community during the period 1856 – 1866 they mentioned
among others: "The synagogue is in a state of disrepair"
and "condition of that building, as well as that of the
mikve and the staff was less than satisfactory".
The community report also mentioned that 57 Jews lived in
Dinxperlo in 1860, in the "adjunct synod" of the Jewish
Community". During the period of 1851 to until 1866 there
was no officiating chazzan. According to the report of
1860 the synagogue was in such a state of disrepair that
it was decided in 1865 to start using a rented hall. In
1886 the religion teacher/chazzan Isaac Mennist of "Mokum"
(Amsterdam) was appointed in Dinxperlo. He would spend his
whole life in the "Achterhoek", until the German occupiers
deported him to a concentration camp in 1943. The job of
rebbe, like in many small communities, did not pay enough
to live on and was too much to die from. Mennist had
therefore two secondary jobs: that of bookkeeper at the
butter factory and he was also correspondent for several
newspapers. On his 75th birthday Mennist was congratulated
by Chief Rabbi Levisson, who pointed out that he had been
active in the community for no less than 55 years!
On Sunday, February 17th, 1889 the solemn inauguration of
the new synagogue took place. On this festive Sunday
morning the torah scrolls of the old synagogue were
brought to the new synagogue and the choir sang the song
of welcome from Psalm 118. In the new synagogue services
were held on Friday evenings, three times on Shabbath and
during the Jewish Holidays. During one of these services
Chief Rabbi L. Wagenaar held a ceremonial speech.
The celebration for the synagogue's 50 year existence on
Tuesday, March 7th, 1939 was not a festive one because of
the situation in the neighboring country. Abraham Fuldauer
and Leo Heilbron, who had attended the inauguration in
1889, were guests of honour at this ceremony.
The cemetery
Very little can be told about the cemetery in Dinxperlo.
Next to the synagogue that was built in 1889 was also an
old Jewish cemetery. Around 1800 the Jewish families also
kept a small Jewish cemetery next to the house synagogue
of Mozes Israel Fuldauer. It seems that this small plot
had also served around 1864 as "a market-place and
fairground". A smith had asked to build a forge in 1864,
but the municipality would not grant a permit.
Industry, mainly carpet factories
During the years 1840 – 1880 many inhabitants of Dinxperlo
earned their living from cotton weaving and many of the
420 breadwinners subsisted as linen weavers. In 1882 the
municipal administration gave a permit to the Deventer
carpet manufacturer Prins to build a weaving mill and
dye-house. He had a large carpet factory built in which
many employees could earn their living. During this period
there also existed two blue-weaving mills where many linen
weavers earned a living. The Prins family, Maurits and
Frederika and their four children had settled in Dinxperlo
in mid-1882. They paid good wages and provided good social
care, such as sick-funds and unemployment funds. They also
saw to it that a district nurse would be employed. In 1889
the provisions of the sick-fund were put at the disposal
of the factory.
Benjamin Prins was town councilor from 1920 to 1929, the
last two years of which he was alderman. The son, Maurits
Benjamin Prins was chairman and board member of several
institutions in Dinxperlo. Nephew Maurits Philip Prins was
also active in local politics and institutions. Thus in
1929 he became a member of the town council and in 1933 he
was both alderman and deputy mayor – all this until April
1940. At the same time he was also among others member of
the board of the civic guard. The Prins family also took
the initiative to have Dinxperlo connected to the
telephone and electricity nets. In 1904 the management of
the carpet factory strongly promoted the connection of a
telephone line from Dinxperlo to Terborg. In 1907 the
employees of the factory have, as mentioned in the
municipal report of that year: established a "new sick-
and relief-fund, starting from the 1st of January,
enabling free choice of doctors and members can be treated
in the normal way when they are sick."
In 1916 70 adults worked at the carpet factory, 18 boys
and 4 girls and 10 years later 120 adults worked in two
carpet factories.
Border Perils and Refugees
After the nazi's had taken over power in 1933 and
boycotted the Jews in April 1933, many Jews left the
neighboring country. At the beginning of 1934 around 4200
refugees were registered and the number of non- registered
persons was estimated at 800. In the Thirties a bishop
from Germany came to visit Dinxperlo and the Jew Fuldauer
hung a huge banner in front of his house with the text:
"Although I am an Israelite, I celebrate together with the
Bishop".
In May 1938 the Netherlands offered shelter to 25000
German refugees, about 75% of whom were Jews. In the
synagogue of Dinxperlo the chazzan said a special prayer
during services since November 1938 because of the
emergency in Germany. The mayor of Dinxperlo, Verbeek,
established a special committee with the request:" to
offer help to persons persecuted because of race or
religion". On December 3rd, 1938 a special collection was
held for the persecuted persons. The above-mentioned Mayor
Verbeek was of great help to the refugees. Through his
mediation, among others, a Jewish family in Terborg took
in a group of refugees. Mayor Verbeek led a large
collection for the mainly Jewish refugees and he showed
special sympathy with the fate of the Jews in the German
speaking countries and those occupied by the nazi's. He
did not hesitate to extend residence permits to refugees,
which he did till end December 1938. Suddenly there
appeared reports in newspapers that the popular Verbeek
had been put on sick leave. This was a great shock to all
inhabitants of Dinxperlo. It was held against Hendrik
Verbeek that he applied with too great flexibility the
stringent rule of the ministry of justice, namely that
only if someone was threatened with "immediate danger of
life" a residence permit should be given. Verbeek did
everything possible to save people. He took into
consideration that he infringed the rules. Nevertheless,
he as well as his colleague in Gendringen, did everything
possible in order to save people and they were the
exceptions. In other municipalities in the neighborhood
much less was done to keep the refugees from the claws of
the nazi's. Verbeek was betrayed by "trustworthy persons"
who complained about him to the police which led to court
trials and in the end to dismissal. Mayor Verbeek’s
achievements during his term of office were substantive:
the improvement of roads and the building of a new
municipal building are only two items among many others.
He survived the war and died on January 22nd, 1946.
As far as the kehilla Dinxperlo concerns – in July 1947 it
was officially abolished and annexed to Aalten.
SOURCE: Hans Kooger-“Het Oude Volk”-pag.151-172.
With reference notes in the original on pag.172-175 (in
Dutch)
Published by “Staring
Instituut/Mr.H.J.Steenbergenstichting”-Doetinchem, 2001
(Slightly revised).
[with permission of the author]
Extracted and edited in Dutch by: Trudi & Berrie Asscher.
Translation into English: Nina Mayer
Final editing:-Trudi Asscher, Ben Noach
The short chapter Some anecdotes on Salomon Levie (de
Jong) and his descendants was contributed by Yael Ben
Lev-de Jong from her family archives.
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De synagoge in de Kwikkelstraat Dinxperlo 1900 ![]() |
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