During the November 9th
and 10th, 1938, 75 years ago this month, in a ferocious orchestrated
campaign of anti-Semitism of violence, vandalism and ransacking, Jews and Jewish property were targeted across Nazi
Germany and Austria. At
least 91 Jews were murdered and hundreds more were injured during the violence.
For the first time 30,000 Jews were
deported to Concentration Camps simply because they were Jewish. Some 267 synagogues, many are considered to be of luminous
architecture, were burned; almost 7,500 Jewish businesses were destroyed and many schools
and cemeteries were vandalized. This infamous night came to be called
Kristallnacht — the Night of Broken Glass, for all the shattered store
windowpanes that carpeted German streets. Today, in Germany, this horrific
night is called Pogrom Night. Essentially, Kristallnacht was the turning point
in Nazi Germany's persecution of Jews, and a significant event in what pursued
it, the Holocaust, the systematic extermination of Jews by the eager to kill
Jews Nazi Germany.
What
the Nazis fundamentally did was not only killing 6 million Jews, they killed
1000 years of Jewish-German culture. They killed art, music, philosophy, science
and commerce. The Nazis took Germany into abyss and darkness of evil and
brought to surface the ugliest side of mankind.
This
weekend, at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angele, to a full auditorium with Holocaust
survivors among the guests, attended by Mr. Stefan Biedermann, Deputy Consul General
of the Federal Republic of Germany and sponsored by Dr. Stephen Schloss, whose
family emigrated from Germany to the United States when he was five years old, and
the German Consulate, a special concert performance in commemoration of Kristallnacht
took place.
Cantors
Netanel Baram and Nathan Lam, conductor Roï Azoulay and the Kol-Rina man Choir,
against the virtual reconstruction of German synagogues that were destroyed on
those two dark days background, revived the music of the great synagogues of pre-Nazi
Germany era of the renowned hazzans and composers Solomon Sulzer, Louis
Lewandowski, Eduard Birnbaum, Yossele Rosenblatt and Israel Alter.
L-Conductor
Roï Azoulay, Cantor Netanel Baram, Dr. Stephen Schloss, Liebe Geft
director Museum of Tolerance, Cantor Nathan Lam, Mr. Stefan Biedermann,
Deputy Consul General Federal Republic of Germany
The
Kristallnacht riots marked the transition in Nazi policy and was the harbinger
of the Final Solution the Nazis had planned for the European Jewry.
The
result of that policy, which began with systematic legal, economic, and social
disenfranchisement of the Jews in Germany and Austria ended up with the murder
of one of every three Jews of the Jewish nation.
It
is the DUTY of every Jew to continue reminding the world, in any way possible,
of the Holocaust, especially the perpetrator Germany.
While
today the Jewish nation is grateful to have risen from the ashes of the
Holocaust, to have a homeland and that Jews thrive again and achieve wonders, the
Jewish nation is still exponentially smaller than it was before the Holocaust
took place.
Among
all the nations of the world, Germany should be leading a forever lasting
campaign against anti-Semitism, because today this malevolent disease has again
infected way too many in the world, people and nations alike, targeting Jews
and the nation state of the Jewish people, Israel.
We
must mean it when we say Never Again
No comments:
Post a Comment