Kristallnacht, literally the “Night of Crystal,” but generally translated as the “Night of Broken Glass,” was a tragic turning point in the fate of Germany’s Jewish community. The country-wide pogrom began on November 9, 1938, and lasted through the 10th. Over the course of Kristallnacht, close to 100 Jews were killed, 30,000 Jewish men were arrested, hundreds of synagogues were burned and desecrated and over 7,000 Jewish shops were vandalized and had their windows shattered (hence the name Kristallnacht).
The outbreak of violence was orchestrated by Nazi Propaganda Minister, Joseph Goebbels. However, the Nazi leadership firmly maintained that the actions were a spontaneous uprising of the German people against the Jews. They also used fabricated Jewish crimes in order to enact further oppressive laws against Jews, including diverting insurance payments for property destroyed in the pogroms.
The excuse for the so-called “spontaneous” pogrom was the death on November 9th of German diplomat Ernst vom Rath in Paris. He was shot by a 17-year-old Jewish youth, Herschel Grynszpan. Young, unemployed and an illegal resident trying to avoid deportation from Paris, Grynszpan shot the diplomat as a reaction to his parents’ deportation to Poland. The Grynszpans had lived in Hanover, Germany since 1911. In October 1938, the Germans expelled all Polish Jews from German soil just as Poland was about to implement a new law removing Polish citizenship from anyone residing outside of Poland for more than five years. But Poland refused to take the refugees, and 12,000 Jews were put in refugee camps at the border.
The involvement of German citizens in the pogroms, or at the very least the lack of protest from neighbors (and neighboring countries), affirmed the Nazi’s belief that they could do as they please concerning the Jews. Previously oppressive measures had been non-violent, but Kristallnacht was the first step toward the horror of the “Final Solution.”
This Saturday is the 86th anniversary of Kristallnacht.
Copyright © 2024 NJOP. All rights reserved.
Related Posts
Placing A Veil
One of the most meaningful customs of a traditional Ashkenazi wedding is the ceremony…
0 Comments3 Minutes
Words of Praise
The next time you attend a wedding, be sure to enhance the joy and happiness of the…
0 Comments1 Minutes
Taking a Stand in North Carolina
In honor of North Carolina’s ratification of the United States Constitution on November…
0 Comments2 Minutes