Welcome to the Lilli Jahn Haus
in Cologne
On this website we have compiled all the information for you to make it easier to settle in and live in our Felixx student Homes. We wish you a wonderful and exciting time in the Lilli Jahn Haus and a successful study or training with many new experiences!
When you move in, you will receive an email with a link to the WhatsApp group and the contact details of your tutor team. The names and numbers of your tutor team, who are responsible for community life in the house and are available to answer any questions or suggestions you may have, can also be found on the notice board.
News and Events
Study in Cologne:
You can find helpful information and tips here:
Important names & addresses
Property management
Elke Schnütgen
Phone: 09131 6180 47
Mail: elke.schnuetgen@felixx-student.de
Janitorial service
Stephan Hamacher
Phone: 0162 434 73 48
Mail: koeln-ljh@felixx-student.de
Working hours: Monday – Friday: 7:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Accounting
Jeannine Blind
Phone: 09131 6180 53
Mail: jeannine.blind@felixx-student.de
Internetaprovider DS-Networks
Phone: 09131 927 013 10
Mail:info@DS-networks.de
Service Provider launderette
RentWash
Phone: 01801 73 689 274 (Hotline)
Mail:info@rentwash.de
Website: rentwash.de
Emergency key service
Jürgen Heyne KG
Phone: 0221 36 62 36
Website: heyne-sicherheit.de
Who was actually Lilli Jahn?
Born 1900 in Cologne, murdered 1944 in Auschwitz-Birkenau.
After studying medicine, the woman who gave her name to our second house in Cologne worked with her non-Jewish husband as a country doctor in Immenhausen in Hesse. The couple had five children who were baptized and brought up as Protestants, while Lilli Jahn remained attached to her Jewish faith. After the anti-Semitic legislation of the National Socialists, she was no longer allowed to work as a doctor, but was initially protected from further reprisals by her so-called “privileged mixed marriage.” When Ernst Jahn fell in love with a younger doctor, had a child with her and divorced her, however, the situation changed dramatically. Lilli Jahn had to move to Kassel, was soon deported to the Breitenau labor education camp, and was murdered in Auschwitz in 1944. From her imprisonment, she kept up a moving correspondence with her five children. It was published in 2002 and translated into many languages as a literary testimony of high standing.