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HEINRICH
DITTMAR
Alsfeld, Hesse
Nominated
by William C. and Judith Freund, Millington, NJ;
and Michael Maynard, London, England
Heinrich Dittmar
began asking questions when asking questions was taboo. It was the early
1970s in Alsfeld, a small town in Hesse where Jews had once lived. I
squeezed people. There were lots of Jews herewhere are they
now? the 68-year-old remembers asking. They just
replied, I dont want to talk about it.
But Dittmar did
talk about it. He collected material bit by bit, piece by piece. Through
three decades, he assembled the history of a generations-long partnership
that had existed between Jews and other Hessians. As a local politician,
he pressed for the repair and maintenance of the 16 Jewish cemeteries
in the region and worked with the Alsfeld Museum to exhibit his material.
These days, he is
a central figure for Jewish history in the Vogelsberg region,
says Joachim Legatis, a journalist inspired by Dittmar to pursue Jewish
historical work. Dittmar, who worked as a special-education teacher,
arranges guided tours and lectures for school classes, and he is responsible
for a yearly Kristallnacht commemoration ceremony. He also publishes
books and articles in local papers and stays in contact with survivors.
He brings this energy to his other pursuits, whether history, the church
community, football clubs or local politics. Contacting and working
with people, like in his guided tours, organizing projectsthat
is really his world, says his daughter, Christiane Sattler.
About 25 years ago,
Dittmar found a dusty stack of documents in a corner of the towns
archive. They were about the Jews of Alsfeld, he said. They
had been separated from the others. The History of the Jews of
Alsfeld, a book that he researched and helped write, describes how closely
Germans and Jews in the region had lived since the 17th century. (The
relationship was so close, the two groups had even influenced one anothers
mourning rituals.) He wanted to send a volume of his book to every survivor
he could find, regardless of where they lived. Town officials hesitated,
so Dittmar decided to pay for postage himself. My work is dedicated
to the people who never got a gravestone, he says.
The news of his
efforts in Alsfeld eventually reached Arthur Strauss, who had been born
in the town but emigrated to South Africa in the 1930s. After the war,
Strauss went to Frankfurt, but he says Dittmars work motivated
him to return to the place where his grandparents are buried. Without
him, there would have been no reason to build up relations in Alsfeld
again, Strauss says. Because of Dittmar, Strauss reconnected with
a cousin, friends from his youth and schoolmates, among others.
When Dittmar started
his research, his fascination with the German-Jewish past was inspired
by simple curiosity. He even used family vacations to visit historic
sites or do research for friends. But it quickly grew deeper. When
I saw how grateful and happy people were that I could help find out
something, he says, that really gave me a tremendous pleasure.
His pleasure has
been tempered by difficulties, however. While open hostility was rare,
Dittmar vividly recalls the time when researching German-Jewish history
met with resistance at every turn. One day, I came to use a villages
archive, he says. When I mentioned that my research was
about Jews, suddenly the door key was lost. But problems like
that one didnt stop him. Getting past them just required patience,
something Dittmar learned from nearly 30 years of teaching special-education
students.
Today, his tracing
of the past continues. For his latest project, he interviewed an Alsfeld
Jew who shared memories about growing up there. Dittmar next wants to
talk to other Germans and juxtapose the stories on video. He is
never resting, his daughter says. His brain always needs
new nutrition.
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