Louis Bodenheimer is forced to sell his property and business

Nazi ideology was deeply anti-Semitic and during the early years of their control in Germany the Nazis wanted all Jews to leave the country – and 'encouraged' them to do so with legislation that not only bullied them but also took away their rights and identity as German citizens. Within a few years, an efficient killing machine for Jews was adopted.
While many German Jews recognised the advantages (particularly for young people) of leaving the country, there were serious financial implications. It was ruinously expensive for all but well-off Jews to be able to consider emigrating. It was not only difficult for them to gain entry as immigrants to another country, it was also difficult for them to leave Germany as emigrants. The Reichsfluchtsteuer (the Reich Flight Tax) was a stringent tax to limit the amount of currency and property that Jews could take out of the country with them. In 1937, when Henny's cousin, Arthur Bodenheimer, hoped to emigrate from Frankfurt to America, his father, Louis Bodenheimer, paid 5,000 Marks in Reichsfluchtsteuer for him to be able to do so. In order to find the money to do this, he had to sell one of his properties. In this way, Arthur and his wife, Sitta, were eventually able to emigrate to New York, arriving on 24 June 1938. Sitta's parents went with them.
But even before they left, Louis Bodenheimer was also forced by the anti-Semitic Nazi laws to close his prosperous second-hand dealer business at Klostergasse 34 – 36 in Frankfurt. He did this on 24 January 1938, and then several months later, on 15 November 1938, he was forced to 'sell' this business - probably to an Alois Gassner, and probably at a very low price. Arthur and Sitta hoped to make it possible for Arthur's parents to join them in New York and saved desperately from their meagre wages as newly-arrived immigrants to pay for his parents' journey.
At last, on 30 May 1941, Arthur was able to write to Henny and Hermann Hartog,
'My parents have been given a place on an American Export Line ship for 30 January 1942. God alone knows what will happen before then.'
In fact, on 20 October 1941 - possibly unknown to Arthur and Sitta - Louis Bodenheimer and his wife, Hedwig, were taken in the first deportation from Frankfurt to the ghetto at Łódź. Louis was 65, and Hedwig was 69 years old. According to a note in the Reich currency files, Louis' considerable fortune was used 'for the benefit of the Reich'. Hedwig died on 17 May 1942, and Louis died in the hospital at Łódź on 10 August 1942.
(the photo shows Arthur and Sitta (far left) on their wedding day 05.08.1937 with Sitta's parents (far right),
Arthur's parents (centre) and Arthur's aunt)









