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In memoriam

Leo Levy (born 19 September 1881 in Połczyn-Zdrój, died 10 November 1938 in Połczyn-Zdrój) was a German merchant from the Jewish Levy family, a doctor of chemistry, and a soldier in Wilhelm II's Imperial Army during World War I. He was a wealthy townsman who was murdered in his home by the Sturmabteilung during Kristallnacht.

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Leo

Leo Levy (born 19 September 1881 in Połczyn-Zdrój, died 10 November 1938 in Połczyn-Zdrój) was a German merchant from the Jewish Levy family, a doctor of chemistry, and a soldier in Wilhelm II's Imperial Army during World War I. He was a wealthy townsman who was murdered in his home by the Sturmabteilung during Kristallnacht.

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Origins The ancestors of Leo Levy settled in Greater Poland during the 18th century. They faced numerous restrictions, including prohibitions on purchasing land, employing Christians, and other significant limitations. They were also denied the status of Schutzjuden (protected Jews under special patronage). On 14 June 1744, Ascher Ben Yechazkiel Halevi was born. In Greater Poland, he bore the surname Ben Yechazkiel Halevi but later adopted the name Berisch Ascher. In 1765, he married Feigel Gitel Bat Yehuda Mosche, a member of the Horowitz family. Berisch Ascher's family eventually emigrated to Western Pomerania (then known as Farther Pomerania, German: Hinterpommern), where subsequent generations resided in Połczyn-Zdrój (German: Polzin, later Bad Polzin) during the 19th and 20th centuries. The Levy lineage spans five generations: Berisch Ascher, Ascher Jäckel/Ascher Jakob Levy, Ascher Levy, Bernhard Levy, and Leo Levy.

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Leo Levy was born on 19 September 1881 in Połczyn-Zdrój. His father was Bernhard Levy, his grandfather Ascher Levy, and his great-grandfather Ascher Jäckel-Levy. He attended the Jewish school on Targowa Street (no longer in existence) and the public school built in 1866 on Grunwaldzka Street. His education included religious studies (reading the Torah, learning to read and write in Hebrew), singing, gymnastics, and subjects taught at the public school. Classes were held daily except for Friday afternoons and Saturdays. Under his father's guidance, Leo also gained knowledge of finance, accounting, and the principles of running the family business. The family lived in a two-story house on 5 Marca Street (German: Brunnenstrasse) in Połczyn, purchased in 1842 by Ascher and Fanny Levy for 1,300 thalers from the von Manteuffel family. From 1899 onward, Leo lived in a large house on Zdrojowa Street, where his father gradually acquired an entire floor, which had previously served as a sanatorium. Leo resided there with his parents and four siblings: Lina, Ernst, Siegfried, and Ida, later joined by his wife and daughters. Until 1938, the family occupied the entire floor. The business headquarters, however, remained on 5 Marca Street. In 1899, at the age…

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In 1913, Leo Levy married Else Frensdorf, a woman from a traditional Jewish family in Hanover. Some sources suggest the marriage may have occurred in 1911 when Leo turned 30. The couple led a peaceful, harmonious life. Leo deeply valued his wife and was devoted to his family. Leo and his older brother Siegfried assisted their father in managing the family business, eventually becoming co-owners. The company operated in diverse sectors, including grain and agricultural trade, lumber sales, banking (holding shares in the Leipzig–Magdeburg railway line), and the railway enterprise constructing the Stargard–Koszalin line. Due to his passion for chemistry, Leo took particular interest in the limeworks in Grzmiąca. On the Shabbat of 1 August 1914, Leo reflected on the significance of the Tisha B'Av holiday and offered prayers for Emperor Wilhelm II in light of the outbreak of war. In the absence of a rabbi in Połczyn-Zdrój, Leo led synagogue prayers, a responsibility previously fulfilled by his father and grandfather. In September 1914, at age 33, Leo was drafted into the military. His brother Siegfried, deemed unfit for service by the draft board, took over the business. Leo's cousin, Rudolf Levy, served as a driver in the 117th Infantry…

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Leo Levy a publicat o actualizare

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Leo Levy, after the death of his father in 1920, ordered the office to be closed for the period of shiva; family members gathered in the family home, observing the official mourning for a week. Leo became the head of the family and the director of the company. In 1922, Leo's mother Henrietta died. Her funeral was modest and quiet. Due to the war reparations that Germany had to pay to the victors, there was an atmosphere of crisis and defeat in the country. On 20 November 1922, Leo and Siegfried received a loan of one hundred and five hundred thousand marks from the bank, which allowed them to expand the timber business on a large scale. They purchased another sawmill near Koszalin. Leo's daughters, Hannah and Eva, studied at an agricultural school and left for Palestine before the war. According to the will, Leo paid his siblings, Ernst, Ida, and Lina, their rightful share of the inheritance. Leo was known as a righteous, diligent, but also stubborn owner of the company. In 1926, Polzin changed its name to Bad Polzin. In 1932, there were 120 Jews living in the town, including Leo, his wife Else, and their four daughters:…

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Leo after 1933 When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of the Reich in 1933, there were about half a million Jews living in Germany, and their wealth amounted to approximately twelve billion marks. From this moment on, the situation for local Jews began to systematically worsen. Already in 1932, the local Nazi Party branch was the largest and most influential party in Połczyn-Zdrój. Hatred towards Jews became a widespread phenomenon. In the same year, Leo wrote to his brother in Berlin:Two books will never be on the shelves of my library: "Der Judenstaat" by Theodor Herzl and "Mein Kampf" by Adolf Hitler.In Połczyn-Zdrój, hostile acts against Jews began to appear, such as the inscription "Jews enter at their own risk", a sign at the entrance to the spa park reading "Dogs and Jews not allowed", and the throwing of a rotten egg into the Levych family's basement room. Leo began wearing a medal indicating that he was a loyal German. In 1933, during the Passover holiday, when the family gathered for the traditional Seder, he, as the head of the family, sat at the head of the table during the festive meal. On 16 March 1934, his brother Ernst died in…

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The day before Kristallnacht, Leo Levy dismissed one of his employees, an assistant accountant named Franz, who was a member of the Gestapo. On 10 November 1938, at 4 AM, just days after his return from Palestine, Leo was murdered in his room at the house on Zdrojowa Street (Bismarck Prommenade) by the Sturmabteilung. One version of the story says that Franz entered his apartment with two Sturmabteilung members, who shot him as soon as Levy opened the door. Leo's wife, Else, informed their youngest daughter, Ruth, who arrived several hours later from Berlin to Połczyn-Zdrój. The family secretly buried him at the local cemetery. Ruth arranged the funeral, and two Christian gravediggers dug the grave. There was no man present who could recite the Kaddish, and only Else and Ruth prayed at the grave. Leo Levy was the last male descendant of the Levy family from Pomerania. He loved his homeland while being fully aware of his Jewish heritage and his attachment to religious rituals. He embodied a dual cultural patriotism, sharing his respect between two traditions: the Prussian state and Hebrew heritage. On his grave, Else had the following words engraved: "Here rests Leo Levy, who died an…

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Bibliography Frister, Roman (2007). Miłość niemożliwa. Aschera Levy'ego tęsknota do Niemiec [Impossible Love: Ascher Levy's Longing for Germany] (in Polish). Translated by Klingofer, Anna. Warsaw: Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy. ISBN 978-83-06-03095-2. Chmielewski, Tomasz (2015). Połczyn-Zdrój i okolice [Połczyn-Zdrój and Surroundings] (in Polish). Połczyn-Zdrój: PHU Eko-Map. ISBN 978-83-60286-86-9.

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