The bronze coat left behind lies on the railing leading up to the Wiwili Bridge, which spans the tracks at Freiburg main station. A bronze plaque with the following text explaining the monument is affixed to the wall below.
On October 22, 1940, more than 450 Jewish citizens from Freiburg and the surrounding area were deported from the freight depot of the former train station to the Gurs camp in southern France on the orders of the Nazi regional leadership. Many of them perished in Gurs from starvation and disease; most were murdered in the Auschwitz extermination camp.
City of Freiburg, October 2003
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| The express freight handling facility on a siding at the Freiburg Central Station |
Only a few photos - none in Freiburg - captured the moment when Jews were arrested prior to their deportation to Gurs.
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| Children watch as Jews are loaded onto military trucks in Kippenheim. |
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There is a charcoal drawing of Freiburg by Fritz Löw, which he created
in Gurs. On the police truck are prisoners, including a boy |
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Hitler receives visitors at his headquarters in Hornisgrinde in the
Black Forest during the French Campaign. In the photo, from left to right: Josef Bürckel, (?), Martin Bormann (?), Robert Wagner, Adolf Hitler, and Hitler's valet Heinz Linge. |
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| Public auctions in Freiburg ... |
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| ... and Lörrach |
Among those deported were the Leifmann siblings from Goethestraße 33: Robert, Else, and Martha. While Robert died in Gurs, his sisters survived and lived in Zurich until their deaths.
As early as June 7, 1954, Else Liefmann urged the promotion of a culture
of remembrance in Freiburg in a letter sent from Zurich to Mayor
Wolfgang Hoffmann, "The fact that Freiburg has not - or not yet - decided to erect such
a memorial is, for Jews or Christians living abroad - to the latter
group of whom I also belong - a sad testament to how indifferent, how
forgetful so many Germans are toward that memory which they would prefer
to erase, as if nothing had happened. Yes, we who come from abroad ask
ourselves whether such an attitude does not express a fear of those many
who still - or once again today - adhere to the spirit of the
Thousand-Year Reich in Germany, and against whom the authorities
themselves are perhaps divided in their sentiments and apparently too
weak?"
Aleksandra Assmann writes about forgetting in her book Forms of Forgetting: "Not remembering, but forgetting, is the foundation of human and
social life. Remembering is the negation of forgetting and generally
entails an effort, a rebellion, a veto against time and the course of
events. Just as cells are replaced in the body of an organism, so too
are objects, ideas, and individuals periodically replaced in society.
Forgetting happens silently, unspectacularly, and everywhere.
Remembering, by contrast, is the probable exception, based on certain
conditions."
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Here stood the synagogue of Freiburg's Israelite community,
built in 1870 and destroyed on November 10, 1938, under a regime of violence and injustice. |
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| With all the troubled water, the text on the memorial plaque is difficult to read. |
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On the 60th anniversary of the deportation, October 2, 2000, the
citizens of Freiburg donated this commemorative plaque, which provides extensive information about the Wagner-Bürckel Action. |
Only a few of those imprisoned in the camp were saved. Starting in August 1942, most of them—provided they had not already died of starvation and disease in Gurs itself—were deported to the extermination camps in the East, primarily to Auschwitz and Majdanek. Over 5,200 of those deported to Gurs died as victims of violence.
Too many looked the other way back then; too few resisted. This must not and will not be repeated.
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| Freiburg's new synagogue on Engelstraße |
The city of Bad Nauheim incorporated the symbol of the forgotten coat into its memorial bearing the names of the city's Holocaust victims.
In the ensuing discussion, someone asked how one could explain that a deportee who was wearing his coat in the autumn month of October could have so easily forgotten it?
The name "Forgotten Coat" for the memorial has caught on among the people of Freiburg. That is why Red Baron suggested trying "The Left-Behind Coat."
The coat was left behind by a deportee, intentionally or unintentionally, as a memento.
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