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Visiting Info
Opening Hours:

Sunday to Thursday: ‬09:00-17:00

Fridays and Holiday eves: ‬09:00-14:00

Yad Vashem is closed on Saturdays and all Jewish Holidays.

Entrance to the Holocaust History Museum is not permitted for children under the age of 10. Babies in strollers or carriers will not be permitted to enter.

Drive to Yad Vashem:
For more Visiting Information click here

The Jewish Community of Regensburg in the Early Years of the Nazi Regime

In 1933, there were 427 Jews in Regensburg, out of a total population of 81,106. Branches of many Jewish organizations were active in the community:  the Central Association of German Citizens of Jewish Faith (Central Verein), Jewish Assistance (Jüdischen Hilfsverein), the Reich Federation of Jewish Front Soldiers (Reichsbund Jüdischer Frontsoldaten), the Jewish History and Literature Association and many Zionist organizations. The Cultural Federation of German Jews (Jüdischer Kulturbund), which had some 200 members, organized performances and concerts featuring Jewish artists invited to the city. The Jewish youth had the choice of the Ultra-orthodox Ezra movement, the Association of Jewish Youth (Jüdischer Jugendverein) and the Maccabi Zionist sports association.

Boycott day of Jewish stores, 1 April 1933: a Jewish store in Regensburg under the watch of an SA guard to ensure that the boycott was carried out.
Boycott day of Jewish stores, 1 April 1933: a Jewish store in Regensburg under the watch of an SA guard to ensure that the boycott was carried out.

Boycott day of Jewish stores, 1 April 1933: a Jewish store in Regensburg under the watch of an SA guard to ensure that the boycott was carried out.
Jewish men under the watch of an SA guard as they are taken under arrest to the Gestapo building in Regensburg during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in 1938.
Jewish men under the watch of an SA guard as they are taken under arrest to the Gestapo building in Regensburg during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in 1938.

At the back, a man is holding a sign reading "The Deportation of the Jews".
The Jews were deported from the Gestapo building to Dachau.

Jewish men under the watch of an SA guard as they are taken under arrest to the Gestapo building in Regensburg during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in 1938.
Deportation of the Jews of Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938
Deportation of the Jews of Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938

Deportation of the Jews of Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938
Deportation of the Jews of Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp on 10 November 1938. The sign reads: "The Deportation of the Jews".
Deportation of the Jews of Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp on 10 November 1938. The sign reads: "The Deportation of the Jews".

The Jews are guarded by soldiers of the SS and other Nazi organizations.

Deportation of the Jews of Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp on 10 November 1938. The sign reads: "The Deportation of the Jews".
Nazi county leader ("Kreisleiter") Weigart supervising the deportation of the Jews from Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938
Nazi county leader ("Kreisleiter") Weigart supervising the deportation of the Jews from Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938

Nazi county leader ("Kreisleiter") Weigart supervising the deportation of the Jews from Regensburg to the Dachau concentration camp during the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938
The ruins of the Regensburg synagogue after the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938
The ruins of the Regensburg synagogue after the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938

The ruins of the Regensburg synagogue after the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht"), 10 November 1938
Members of various Nazi organizations march in Regensburg, 10 November 1938. Left: Weingart, county leader. Right: Wenger, head of the local party cell.
Members of various Nazi organizations march in Regensburg, 10 November 1938. Left: Weingart, county leader. Right: Wenger, head of the local party cell.

Members of various Nazi organizations march in Regensburg, 10 November 1938. Left: Weingart, county leader. Right: Wenger, head of the local party cell.
Renovation of the Regensburg synagogue after the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in 1938
Renovation of the Regensburg synagogue after the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in 1938

Renovation of the Regensburg synagogue after the November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in 1938
Magnus Weinburg, rabbi of the Regensburg community from 1931 to 1935
Magnus Weinburg, rabbi of the Regensburg community from 1931 to 1935

Rabbi Weinburg was deported to the Terezin ghetto in September 1942 and was murdered in March 1943. His son submitted a Page of Testimony in his memory.

Magnus Weinburg, rabbi of the Regensburg community from 1931 to 1935
The November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in Regensburg

The November Pogrom ("Kristallnacht") in Regensburg