Lancastrians decry Nazis, 1933

November 10th, 2008 8:20 pm · 0 comments

Seventy years ago, on the night of Nov. 9-10, 1938, a wave of anti-Jewish rioting in Germany and Austria ushered in the period of intense, overt oppression that led to the Nazis’ systemic murder of 6 million Jews in the Holocaust from 1939 to 1945.

On ”Kristallnacht,” Jews were attacked, their busineses ransacked and more than 1,000 synogogues damaged. The anniversary was marked with solemn services in Germany and Israel this past weekend. Speakers cited the need to remember the past in confronting modern-day discrimination and anti-semitism.

The coverage reminded me of a March 1933 Lancaster New Era article that I came across several years ago and am now posting here. It was published shortly after Hitler came to power….and more than five years before Kristallnacht.

In the article, the paper reports on a downtown Lancaster meeting at which “600 persons, representing all religious faiths” called on President Franklin D. Roosevelt “to do all in his power to have the German government cease its alleged persecution of Jews.”

I was pleased to see such an early and forceful statement against Nazism being made in our city. But sadly, the optimistic assertions that Hitler would be cowed by world opinion were far off the mark. You can read the full 1933 article below. And below that, you can read an Associated Press story on the Kristallnacht anniversary and see some old photos from that tragic event. 

protest.jpg

Germany, Israel mark
70 years since Kristallnacht

By MELISSA EDDY
Associated Press Writer

BERLIN — “We must not be silent” about condemning anti-Semitism, German chancellor Angela Merkel declared Sunday as Germany and Israel commemorated the 70th anniversary of Kristallnacht, the Nazi-incited riots against Jews.

With concerts, prayers and ceremonies, participants vowed to honor Kristallnacht victims with renewed vigilance. The riots are seen by many as the first step leading to the Nazis’ systematic murder of 6 million Jews in the Holocaust.

Merkel recalled the Nov. 9-10, 1938, riots in which more than 91 German Jews were killed and more than 1,000 synagogues damaged. She told Germans that the lessons of the nation’s past were crucial in confronting a current increase in xenophobia and racism.

“Anti-Semitism and racism are a threat to our basic values — those of democracy and respect for diversity and human rights,” Merkel said at a ceremony in Germany’s newly renovated largest synagogue.

At Israel’s weekly Cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Kristallnacht — Night of the Broken Glass — was “the turning point toward the inevitable destruction of agermany1.jpg greater portion of the Jewish people in Europe between 1939-1945,” adding that Israel “will never forgive or forget” the crimes of the Nazi regime.

Israeli President Shimon Peres issued a statement calling the Holocaust the “worst disaster that ever happened to us.”

Some 30,000 Jewish men and boys were arrested and sent to concentration camps during the pogrom that left the streets of Germany littered with shards of glass from the smashed windows of Jewish homes and shops.germany2.jpg

Germany’s southern neighbor Austria — where Kristallnacht claimed 30 Jewish lives — also commemorated the day, while German-born Pope Benedict XVI called for prayers for Kristallnacht’s victims in “profound solidarity with the Jewish world.”

Benedict himself served briefly in the Hitler Youth corps as a young man in Germany.

germany3.jpgAt Yad Vashem, Israel’s official Holocaust memorial, survivors, their descendants, academics and the German and Austrian ambassadors to Israel took part in a ceremony that also included a rare musical rendition of a work by German-Jewish composer Robert Kahn, whose music was outlawed by the Nazis.

Yad Vashem also presented a new online exhibit, “It Came From Within … 70 Years Since Kristallnacht,” marking the event with images, historical information and pages of testimony about some of the Jews who died during the pogrom.

Charlotte Knobloch, head of Germany’s Central Council of Jews, told the gathering in Berlin’s Rykestrasse Synagogue that Germans must fight against far-right extremism in all its forms.

“One must be sensitive to the quiet and less-quiet signals of anti-democratic developments in our country,” said Knobloch, who lived through Kristallnacht as a girl in Munich, Germany.

The synagogue, a red brick temple built in 1904, survived Kristallnacht because of its location, nestled in an inner courtyard of a densely populated neighborhood. It reopened last year after two years of painstaking renovation.

A memorial concert in Berlin was held later Sunday to mark the anniversary.

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