
Life in Germany's Largest Jewish Retirement Home – DW – 07/24/2025
This is a place where moving life stories come together: of flight, survival and the desire to grow old with dignity.
Today, the retirement home is home to more than 170 people, around three quarters of whom are Jewish. There is also a daytime care program, which is open to senior citizens from outside the home. It offers social contact, activities and moments of joie de vivre.
92-year-old Eva Szepesi, born in Budapest, survived Auschwitz as a child and lost her entire family. Today she tells her story in schools. Despite her traumatic experiences, she has lived in Frankfurt for decades and now visits the home every week during the day. "I didn't even want to come to Germany,' she says. Like her, many residents have been brought here by fate.
Twenty refugees from Ukraine, such as Bella Kiselova and her daughter Marina, have also found shelter here.
Today, the home has grown into an intercultural community, characterized by many nationalities and non-Jewish employees. It is a place that offers security, in times when anti-Semitism is on the rise again worldwide. The community also provides support: through maintaining traditions, hosting celebrations, observing the weekly Sabbath and providing space for commemorating together.
The documentary sensitively accompanies Jewish and refugee people as they go about their everyday lives at the home. It also paints a picture of a place that is characterized by pain, hope, humor and joie de vivre.
DW English
SUN 10.08.2025 – 00:02 UTC
SUN 10.08.2025 – 03:30 UTC
SUN 10.08.2025 – 14:30 UTC
MON 11.08.2025 – 01:16 UTC
MON 11.08.2025 – 05:02 UTC
MON 11.08.2025 – 22:30 UTC
TUE 12.08.2025 – 07:30 UTC
WED 13.08.2025 – 18:30 UTC
Lagos UTC +1 | Cape Town UTC +2 | Nairobi UTC +3
Delhi UTC +5,5 | Bangkok UTC +7 | Hong Kong UTC +8
London UTC +1 | Berlin UTC +2 | Moscow UTC +3
San Francisco UTC -7 | Edmonton UTC -6 | New York UTC -4

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


DW
24-07-2025
- DW
Life in Germany's Largest Jewish Retirement Home – DW – 07/24/2025
The largest Jewish retirement and nursing home in Germany is in Frankfurt am Main. People who survived the Holocaust and yet decided to grow old in the land of the perpetrators still live here, today. This is a place where moving life stories come together: of flight, survival and the desire to grow old with dignity. Today, the retirement home is home to more than 170 people, around three quarters of whom are Jewish. There is also a daytime care program, which is open to senior citizens from outside the home. It offers social contact, activities and moments of joie de vivre. 92-year-old Eva Szepesi, born in Budapest, survived Auschwitz as a child and lost her entire family. Today she tells her story in schools. Despite her traumatic experiences, she has lived in Frankfurt for decades and now visits the home every week during the day. "I didn't even want to come to Germany,' she says. Like her, many residents have been brought here by fate. Twenty refugees from Ukraine, such as Bella Kiselova and her daughter Marina, have also found shelter here. Today, the home has grown into an intercultural community, characterized by many nationalities and non-Jewish employees. It is a place that offers security, in times when anti-Semitism is on the rise again worldwide. The community also provides support: through maintaining traditions, hosting celebrations, observing the weekly Sabbath and providing space for commemorating together. The documentary sensitively accompanies Jewish and refugee people as they go about their everyday lives at the home. It also paints a picture of a place that is characterized by pain, hope, humor and joie de vivre. DW English SUN 10.08.2025 – 00:02 UTC SUN 10.08.2025 – 03:30 UTC SUN 10.08.2025 – 14:30 UTC MON 11.08.2025 – 01:16 UTC MON 11.08.2025 – 05:02 UTC MON 11.08.2025 – 22:30 UTC TUE 12.08.2025 – 07:30 UTC WED 13.08.2025 – 18:30 UTC Lagos UTC +1 | Cape Town UTC +2 | Nairobi UTC +3 Delhi UTC +5,5 | Bangkok UTC +7 | Hong Kong UTC +8 London UTC +1 | Berlin UTC +2 | Moscow UTC +3 San Francisco UTC -7 | Edmonton UTC -6 | New York UTC -4


DW
30-06-2025
- DW
Tomatoes - Indulgence With an Aftertaste – DW – 06/30/2025
Delicious, sweet, low in calories: Tomatoes have a good reputation. They're the most important vegetable in the world, with a total production of 190 million tons per year. But how sustainable is their cultivation? Almería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can't get too warm, or too cold and doesn't like too much direct sunlight. Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción' has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region. And plastic isn't the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe. The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation. DW English SUN 06.07.2025 – 00:02 UTC SUN 06.07.2025 – 03:30 UTC SUN 06.07.2025 – 14:30 UTC MON 07.07.2025 – 01:16 UTC MON 07.07.2025 – 05:02 UTC MON 07.07.2025 – 22:30 UTC TUE 08.07.2025 – 07:30 UTC WED 09.07.2025 – 18:30 UTC Lagos UTC +1 | Cape Town UTC +2 | Nairobi UTC +3 Delhi UTC +5,5 | Bangkok UTC +7 | Hong Kong UTC +8 London UTC +1 | Berlin UTC +2 | Moscow UTC +3 San Francisco UTC -7 | Edmonton UTC -6 | New York UTC -4


DW
19-06-2025
- DW
Leo Baeck Institute: 70 years honoring German-Jewish culture – DW – 06/18/2025
Founded after the Holocaust, the Leo Baeck Institute marks 70 years of preserving the heritage of German-speaking Jews. When German rabbi Leo Baeck was liberated from the Theresienstadt concentration camp on May 8, 1945, the day the war ended, he no longer believed in a future for Jewish people in Germany. Who wanted to live in the country that had planned to exterminate German Jewry and murdered millions? "The era of the Jews in Germany," Baeck said at the time, "is over once and for all." This assessment was shared by most survivors at the time. But what would become of centuries of German Jewish culture? Who would remember the music of Mendelssohn Bartholdy and Arnold Schönberg, the literature of Joseph Roth, Franz Kafka, Alfred Döblin or Else Lasker-Schüler? Even during the years of persecution, preserving German-Jewish cultural heritage was part of the resistance, says the Israeli-Austrian historian, Doron Rabinovici. After 1945, when the full extent of the Holocaustbecame visible, this task seemed all the more urgent. "Remembrance was also resistance against forgetting, against erasure," he told DW of the attempted destruction of Jewish culture during 12 years of Nazi rule. The Leo Baeck Institute in New York is one of three set up in major emigration points for German Jewry Image: Max Stein/Imago Showing what the Nazis destroyed In 1955, ten years after World War II ended, a group of German-speaking Jewish intellectuals including philosopher Hannah Arendt and historian Gershom Scholem founded the Leo Baeck Institute (LBI) "to show what the Nazis had destroyed," explained Michael Brenner, professor of Jewish history and culture at Ludwig-Maximilians University in Munich. The institute would celebrate "cultural achievements, but also the everyday life of German Jews," said Brenner, who has also been the president of the Institute since 2013. The LBI was named after Rabbi Leo Baeck, the "great religious and spiritual shining light of liberal German Jewry," the historian added. Baeck became the first president, but died in 1956, one year after the institute was founded. New York, London and Jerusalem were the most important destinations for Jewish emigrants after the war, and these were also the three locations of the LBI. The myth of Germany's post-Nazi 'zero hour' explained To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Research institute promoting German Jewish heritage What made the LBI special from the very beginning was its collection of historical objects that came mostly from Jewish refugees or their descendants: Books, letters, photos, and also works of art. Today, the LBI is the most important research institute for the heritage of German Jewry. The majority of the LBI collections have been digitized and made accessible online, with scholars and descendants of Jewish survivors globally using the service comprising more than 3.5 million pages. An annual yearbook is also published, events are organized, and young people in science are supported. The LBI also produced the four-volume standard work, "German-Jewish History in the Modern Era." Work is currently underway on a history of the German-Jewish diaspora. Some might be surprised to know that the LBI has existed so long, but few might have expected a branch to open in Berlin. As contemporary witnesses die out and descendants lose touch with their origins, the LBI is trying to keep interest in German-Jewish cultural heritage alive with new projects. These include the podcast "Exil," (or "Exile") narrated by German actress Iris Berben, which is based on letters, diaries and interviews from the LBI archive. Aimed at a younger audience, the podcast tells stories of people whose lives have been shaped by exile, flight or persecution. Commemorating the victims of World War II and Nazi Germany To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Attacks on academic life also threaten the LBI While the renowned research institute is celebrating its 70th birthday in 2025, this should not obscure the fact that its members, especially in the US, feel that their academic work is under threat. "The situation in the USA has not been made any easier by the attacks on academic life," said Michael Brenner of US government policies to cut funding across universities. Historian and author Doron Rabinovici also sees a further threat from the global rise of right-wing parties. Leo Baeck's assessment in 1945 that Jewish life in Germany was over has not come true. But what will the next few years bring? A "resurgent Jewish existence" is only possible in an open society in which antisemitism is combatted, warns Rabinovici. And fightingantisemitismis not possible with right-wing extremists. In Germany, the 70th anniversary of the Leo Baeck Institute will be celebrated with a ceremony under the patronage of Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier. Speakers at this event will include LBI president Brenner and Rabinovici. Holocaust survivor Margot Friedländer dies To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video This article was edited by Sarah Hucal.