Dwingeloo

A few Jews resided in Dwingeloo as early as 1750. By the start of the nineteenth century, during the Napoleonic occupation of the Netherlands, an organized and officially recognized Jewish community was in place. Of the roughly ten families that comprised the community, approximately fifty percent were destitute. During the nineteenth century, the Dwingeloo community also included the Jews of the nearby town of Beilen and the village of Ruinen.

Synagoge in Dwingelo, ca. 1910

Synagoge in Dwingelo, ca. 1910

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E.J. Boneschanscher

In 1821, the Jewish central consistory (NIK) designated Dwingeloo as a local community (Bijkerk) within the district (Ring) of the town of Hoogeveen.

Prior to 1835, the Dwingeloo community held religious services in a room in a local inn. After 1835, the community set up a synagogue in a building that also housed a smith. This synagogue was renovated in 1846 and remained in use until 1923 when the building was destroyed by fire. No synagogue was established to replace it. From 1830 on, the Dwingeloo community had a cemetery of its own, located in the Dwingelerzand (also called the Dwingeler Duinen). A burial society was the only communal organization the community maintained.

Joodse begraafplaats Dwingeloo, 2007

Jewish cemetery in Dwingeloo, 2007

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Arie ten Cate

The Jews of Dwingeloo lived in close proximity to one another and played no important role in the life of the town. Dwingeloo's Jewish population reached its apogee in about 1870. From the beginning of the twentieth century until the eve of the Second World War, membership in the community steadily declined.

During the Second World War almost all the Jews of Dwingeloo were deported and by the Germans and murdered in Nazi death camps.

The Jewish community of Dwingeloo was officially dissolved and merged into the Hoogeveen community in 1950. The cemetery is maintained by local authorities. The authorities attempted to gain National Monument status for the cemetery but their request was denied.

In 2004, a parokhet stolen from the Dwingeloo synagogue during the war was unexpectedly recovered. The parokhet is now in the collection of the Jewish Historical Museum Amsterdam.

The Jewish population of Dwingeloo and surroundings:

The size of the Jewish community over time

1809

84

1840

63

1869

75

1899

47

1930

21

1951

230

1971

164

1998

128