Jews may have lived in Terborg as early as medieval times and
disappeared from the town during the persecutions that followed the
plague epidemic of 1349. Several Jewish families settled anew in
Terborg at the beginning of the 18th century. It is likely that an
organized Jewish community arose by the second half of the 18th
century. The Terborg community was originally linked with that of
Doetinchem.
Terborg's first synagogue was located in a private
home and opened in 1808. During the early 19th century, the Terborg
community grew to such an extent that in 1840 a new synagogue was
opened on the Dorpsstraat. Some years later Terborg became an
independent community separate from that of Doetinchem. In 1901,
the Dorpsstraat synagogue was replaced with a new and larger
building located on the Silvoldseweg.
The Terborg community buried its dead at three cemeteries, one
located in the village of Varsseveld and the other two located on
the Silvoldseweg in Terborg. The first of the two cemeteries on the
Silvoldseweg was established 1742 and the other, located on the
opposite side of street, in 1928.
The board governing the Terborg community consisted of three
members. Local voluntary organizations included a study fellowship
and a women's society. Prior to the Second World War a member of
the Terborg community served on the municipal council of nearby
Wisch.
During the World War II German occupation of the Netherlands,
Jewish children were expelled from local public schools in
September 1941 and compelled to attend a special Jewish school
established in nearby Doetinchem. The majority of the Jews of
Terborg were arrested and deported during 1942 and 1943 and were
subsequently murdered. Approximately 40 local Jews and Jews from
elsewhere managed to survive the war in hiding in Terborg. The
synagogue was damaged during an aerial bombardment in 1945 and was
later razed. Although the interior of the synagogue was plundered,
the synagogue's Torah scrolls were hidden in Amsterdam beforehand
and a number of them were recovered after the war.
A few Jews returned to Terborg during the post-war yeats. A Jewish
community center that also served as a synagogue was opened in
1959. A memorial to the Jews of Terborg murdered during the war was
unveiled at the entrance to the new cemetery during the same year.
The Jewish communities of Terborg and Doetinchem were deprived of
their independent status in 1988, a decision that led to conflict.
In the end, the Jews of the two towns joined together to form a new
community, the NIG-Achterhoek. In 2002, care of the new Jewish
cemetery on the Silvoldseweg was taken over by the municipality of
Wisch.
Varsseveld
Several Jewish families settled in Varsseveld (located midway
between Terborg and Aalten) during the second half of the 18th
century. In about 1800 they established a synagogue in a room and a
private home. The local community remained small but, nonetheless,
established a cemetery of its own, located on the Spiekersweg.
During the wartime German occupation a few of the Jews of
Varsseveld managed to survive in hiding, the rest were deported and
murdered.
Jewish population of Terborg and surroundings:
| 1806 | 20 |
| 1809 | 41 |
| 1840 | 51 |
| 1869 | 79 |
| 1899 | 102 |
| 1930 | 66 |
| 1951 | 31 |
| 1971 | 18 |
Fotoalbum
Twee losbladige fotoalbums met 148 kleurenfoto's van joodse
begraafplaatsen in Nederland, jaren '80.
Collectie > Fotos > 40006664
meer treffers in Collectie > Fotos
Dossier
Dossiers (158) van de Commissie voor Oorlogsschade mbt 155 joodse
gemeentes (Amsterdam en mediene), 1945-1950.
Collectie > Documenten > 00005954
meer treffers in Collectie > Documenten
Buitengewone Zitting der Centrale Commissie op Donderdag 7 Maart 1881.
1881
Verslag van een buitengewone vergadering van de Centrale Commissie over de vraag
van de gemeente te Arnhem de zetel van de ressortale opperrabbijn in Arnhem in ...
Collectie > Joodse pers > 20026393
meer treffers in Collectie > Joodse pers
Joodse oorlogsmonumenten in de provincie Gelderland : alsmede algemene...
2005
Joodse oorlogsmonumenten in de provincie Gelderland : alsmede algemene
oorlogsmonumenten waarop joodse namen voorkomen.
Collectie > Literatuur > 12013463
meer treffers in Collectie > Literatuur
Holland, vaarwel! : De Uitlevering (deel I) ; Nog niets geleerd (deel 2)
2004
Documentaire van Willy Lindwer over de mentaliteit in Nederland ten opzichte van
de joden tijdens en kort na de Tweede Wereldoorlog. In het eerste deel speurt Lindwer ...
Collectie > Audiovisueel > 40001521