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GÜNTER
BOLL
STEINENSTADT, GERMANY
Nominated by Daniel Teichman-Levy, Zurich, Switzerland,
Raymond M. Jung, Zurich, Switzerland
and Professor Freddy Raphael, Strasbourg, France
The work of Günter
Boll has had a major impact in three countries. His research about the
Jewish communities of Baden, Germany, Alsace, France
and northern Switzerland has been of enormous value to Alsatian Jews and
their descendants who currently reside in the far corners of the world.
Because he shared his knowledge so willingly, family histories have been
reconstructed and passed on to the next generation.
Günter Boll was
born in Freiburg on August 5, 1940. Trained as a school teacher with a
strong background in history, he developed a great interest in the Jewish
communities that once flourished in the upper Rhine region. His serious,
scholarly research began in earnest in 1981, when he succeeded in rescuing
from a burning trash site many critical documents and objects that originally
came from the Mackenheim synagogue, located in the Alsace region of France.
These included 130 wimpels (ceremonial torah binders made from swaddling
cloth used at the time of a brit milah) from the years 1669-1904, and
vital records (birth, marriage, and death) going back to 1793.
This led to the publication
of a significant book and to the exploration of grave inscriptions at
a 400 year old cemetery, where until 1755 the Jews of Breisach were buried.
His continued research allowed him to record the nearly obliterated words
on many 18th-century tombstones, the most noteworthy of which was the
gravestone of Josef Guenzburger, founder of six
Jewish municipalities in Oberbaden. His findings led to the publication
of dozens of studies about Jewish life. After more than twenty years of
continuous effort, Mr. Boll persuaded the French government to declare
the cemetery an official historic monument.
His focus was not
simply historical or passive. He demonstrated through publication his
passionate desire to share his knowledge with people living on both sides
of the Rhine. He wanted them to know about the history and culture of
a vanished world: the Jews of the countryside.
His intense interest
in Jewish history has prompted him to give tours of the Jewish cemetery,
the extermination camp of Natzweiler-Struthof and its satellite camp at
Urbes. When Mr. Boll finally succeeded in saving the house of the last
rabbi in Breisach, he initiated the construction of a center on that site
to serve as a meeting place for Christians and Jews, in order to build
positive new relationships that would encourage good will among people.
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