Adolf Scheuer dies in Theresienstadt

On 10 December 1942, Adolf Scheuer (1864 – 1942) died in Theresienstadt.
Aged 78 years, he was tired and ill, widowered for many years and lonely, with few members of his family (if any) nearby. He had not heard from his daughter and son-in-law in France for several months, nor from his two granddaughters in England, and he had no idea that his daughter and son-in-law had been murdered in Auschwitz three months previously. As he had written to them a short while before, 'Lore's Opa is all alone'.
For some time, Adolf Scheuer had managed to get letters and postcards sent to his daughter, Henny, and her husband, Hermann (who were living as refugees in south-west France) by directing them through a third party in neutral Switzerland. Max Ruda lived in Zurich and was known to the others because he had been the Jewish teacher in Wilhelmshaven before emigrating - when Hermann then took over his job. Settled in Zurich, Max Ruda stayed a good friend to the Jewish community he had once known in Germany and became a focus for the exchange of news and mail between emigrants and refugees in different countries.
Adolf Scheuer sent some news on a postcard to Max Ruda on 31 August 1942, knowing that he would try to pass it on to Henny and Hermann. Neither Adolf Scheuer nor Max Ruda knew then that Henny and Hermann had already been arrested in their village in the south-west of France - and that as Adolf was writing his postcard in Frankfurt, Henny and Hermann were incarcerated in the internment/transit camp at Gurs where they were writing their own farewell letters to their friends.
As can be seen on the postcard, Adolf was living at Scheffelstraße 26 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. This was the address of his brother-in-law's house where Adolf had been welcomed since May 1939 not only because he was a dear relative but also because he was then required to live in a 'Jew House'. But Adolf's brother-in-law, Louis Bodenheimer, and his wife, Hedwig, had been deported from that house to Łódz in October 1941 and (whether or not Adolf had received the news) they had been murdered there on 10 August 1942 – three weeks before Adolf wrote his postcard.
And another two weeks later, on Tuesday 15 September 1942, Adolf Scheuer was himself deported from Frankfurt. He was summoned to the wholesale market hall where all those to be deported were collected together in the enormous underground cellars – and where they were mistreated. This was the ninth convoy of deported Jews from the city. It was also the largest, with 1,367 people on board. Railway lines ran close to the market hall and the deportees were taken by train from there to the Jewish ghetto at Theresienstadt, over 500 kilometres away in Czechoslovakia. Adolf Scheuer died there three months after his arrival.
(the picture shows the postcard that Adolf Scheuer addressed to Max Ruda on 31 August 1942)









