Jewish Religious Community of Vienna Israelitische Kultusgemeinde, Vienna (Fond 707)
Extent and Medium
1 microfilm reel (partial), 16 mm
449 digital images, JPEG
Creator(s)
- Wolf-Erich Eckstein
Biographical History
The Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien (IKG) (Vienna Israelite Community) is the body that represents Vienna’s Orthodox Jewish community. Jewish Religious Community of Vienna-was authorized in 1852 by the Austrian authorities to conduct religious, educational and charitable operations among Jews in Vienna. The community was the unofficial representation of Jews interests’ vis-à-vis state entities and the city authorities. The community council was typically represented by the wealthiest and most successful group of Jews of Vienna. The Jewish Community in Vienna was officially dissolved in November 1942. Today, the IKG has around 7000 members. Throughout history, it has represented almost all of Austria's Jews, whose numbers are sufficient to form communities in only a few other cities in Austria. The history of Vienna’s Jewish population dates back to the time of the Roman Empire, but for a long time, Vienna’s Jews were prevented from forming an organisation to represent themselves as a result of legal and social discrimination. This situation first began to change with the Emperor Joseph II’s 1782 Edict of Tolerance. The emancipation of Vienna’s Jewish population began in 1848. In a speech held on 3 April 1849, the young emperor Franz Joseph I, used the words “Israelite Community of Vienna” for the first time; three years later, a provisory constitution for the community was enacted and 1852 is therefore considered the year in which Vienna's Kultusgemeinde was founded. The community's offices were established in the Stadttempel in the Seitenstettengasse. Vienna's Jewish community had around 185,000 members at the time of Austria’s Anschluss with the Third Reich in 1938. In that same year, the Nazis closed the IKG down. It was reopened in May 1938 as the “Vienna Jewish Community” with the task of acting as a buffer organisation between the Nazis and Vienna’s Jewish population. This body was also forced to organise the emigration and later the deportation of Vienna’s Jews for the Central Office for Jewish Emigration. The title Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien has been in use again since 1945. On 29 August 1981, a terrorist attack was made on the synagogue in the Seitenstettengasse using hand grenades and firearms. Two people died and another 21 were injured in the attack. The attack is attributed to the Palestinian extremist Abu Nidal Organisation. Since then, strict security has been in place at the entrance to the synagogue, while the Seitenstettengasse is guarded by the police. [Source: Wikipedia]
Archival History
Rossiĭskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ voennyĭ arkhiv
Acquisition
Forms part of the Claims Conference International Holocaust Documentation Archive at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. This archive consists of documentation whose reproduction and/or acquisition was made possible with funding from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Source of acquisition is the Russian State Military Archive (Rossiĭskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ voennyĭ arkhiv), Osobyi Archive, Fond 707. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives received the filmed collection via the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum International Archival Programs Division in 1993.
Scope and Content
Contains various records related to the administration and activities of the Jewish Community in Vienna: minutes of meetings, statements, cashbooks, tax tables, election reports, lists of Vienna Synagogues, correspondence and letters, and reports. Included are materials on Jewish emigration from archives of HICEM (see also Fond 740), lists of Jewish emigrants form Austria, Poland, Latvia, and the Soviet Union, personal documents of emigrants, bulletins on emigration conditions for Jews from Austria, Switzerland, Luxemburg and Poland, maps and statistical survey of the Jewish population and Jewish emigration form Austria. There are also various documents of Library of the Jewish religious community of Vienna: manuscripts, bibliographic indexes, directories, dictionaries, essays, lectures, dissertations and articles. The collection includes a large number of Hebrew manuscripts, the Torah written in Sephardic script from fifteen century, a medical manuscript, in Sephardic script (XV century), pages form the kabalistic manuscript, written in Oriental script (XVII century), and other manuscripts of Karaite origin. There are also numerous nineteen-entry handmade copies of older manuscripts, a variety of Ashkenazic Hebrew manuscripts from eighteen and nineteen centuries, Hasidic and halakhic works by rabbis of the Schneerson dynasty (Menachem Mendel Schneerson, Shmuel Schneerson, Sholem Dov Ber Schneerson, Yosef Yitzkhok Schneerson). The collection also contains printed publications: a pamphlet with report by Alfred Stern on the founding of the Jewish religious community of Vienna and analyzing of the religious community’s system of governance as well as the rights and duties of its members; glossaries for the school edition of M. Abraham’s fable “Le-yelodeinu” (For our children). The collection also contains a set of the Hebrew-language newspapers “Hatsefirah” and “Hamagid”, and clippings from those and other newspapers. Selected records relate to Jewish emigration from Austria, including meeting minutes, statistical reports, and charts on demographics of Jews; reports from Jewish organizations in Switzerland explaining the country's inability to assist would-be emigrants; a report on the refuge situation in Poland as of August 1, 1939; explanations and charts showing requirements for emigration, as decreed by the Gestapo's Amt IVB4, Central Organization for Jewish Emigration; 1940 articles on the course of emigration from Vienna; and a memo from the Jewish Community in Vienna to Budapest concerning money provided by Vienna to support Jewish emigration. Note: USHMM Archives holds only selected records.
System of Arrangement
Fond 707 (1782-1940). Opis 1-3; Dela 281. Selected records arranged in two series: 1. Reports, statistics, maps, charts on Jewish emigrants and emigration from Austria and in Europe, 1938-1940; 2. Lists of Jewish organizations in Vienna and London, various bulletins and statistics on Jewish emigration in Europe, 1933-1939. Note: Location of digital images; Partial microfilmreel #102: Image #1154-1603.
Conditions Governing Reproduction
Copyright Holder: Rossiĭskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ voennyĭ arkhiv
People
- Wolf-Erich Eckstein
Corporate Bodies
- Zentralstelle für jüdische Auswanderung in Wien
- Jewish committees (ushmm)
Subjects
- Emigration and immigration--Austria--History--20th century.
- Holocaust Jewish (1939-1945)
- Jews--Austria--Politics and government--20th century.
- Europe--Politics and government--20th century.
- Germany--Politics and government--1933-1945.
- Jews--Austria--Vienna--History--20th century.
- Jews--Europe--History--20th century.
- Austria--Emigration and immigration--History--20th century.
- World War 1939-1945--Atrocities--Europe.
- Austria--Ethnic relations.
- Emigration and immigration--Europe--History--20th century.
- Vienna (Austria)
Genre
- Statistics.
- Bulletins.
- Correspondence.
- Document
- Reports.
- Articles.
- Minutes.
- Memorandums.