bg Murska Sobota

Hahn Family House

- Slomškova 23 -
The two-story building, which has a residential function, was built somewhere at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century and was inhabited by the Jewish Hahn family, of which Izidor Hahn was also a member. He was born on April 4, 1893, in the small village of , as the fifth child in the family of a merchant father. After his studies, he became a printer's apprentice at the then-well-known Lendava printer Ernesto Balkanyi. In 1922, as a trained printer, he became the manager of the Prekmurska Printing House, which was owned by the Prekmurska Bank. The following year, the printing house was moved to its own premises and, at his suggestion, new machines were bought and converted to electric drive.
Izidor Hahn
In 1924, Izidor Hahn expanded his business by opening a bookstore and paper shop. In 1931, he bought the valuable and large library of Count 's family at an auction. He edited the collection and later also lent and sold the books. During the , on April 26, 1944, the Jews of Murska Sobota were arrested and taken to concentration camps, including Izidor Hahn and his family. Izidor Hahn died on January 25, 1945, on a transport from to . At the end of the Second World War, the house was looted, and its library collection was also lost.
An old photo that shows the building
Izidor's daughter, Šarika Hahn was the only one in the family who survived the horrors of the Second World War. The 16-year-old girl at the time was separated from her father, the three were put on a cattle wagon and taken to . When she arrived at the concentration camp, she was separated from her mother and brother, who were immediately sent to the gas chamber. Šarika ran after them, but stopped her and sent her to the other side. Šarika Hahn lost her family in the war, and when she returned, she only found the family house completely looted. She was later forced to move out of it.
Šarika Hahn stands in the middle at the time of liberation with a soldier and a fellow prisoner
The top gable of the Eclectic building is topped with a , which features a . The ornamentation around the window, which includes columns that are crowned with a Doric , is quite unusual. If you look a bit further down, you'll see a , which is supported by three columns, which in their turn are supported by a . Two more columns are used, which flank the main entrance door. In addition, the building also contains many geometric shapes and motifs, including an motif.
The building in 1941