Everyday Erinyes #191

 Posted by at 9:54 am  Politics
Nov 092019
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

Just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse …
==================================================================

The forgotten mass destruction of Jewish homes during ‘Kristallnacht’

A looted Jewish shop in Aachen, Germany on the day after Kristallnacht, Nov. 10, 1938.
Wolf Gruner and Armin Nolzen (eds.). ‘Bürokratien: Initiative und Effizienz,’ Berlin, 2001., Author provided

Wolf Gruner, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

Every November, communities around the world hold remembrances on the anniversary of the Nazis’ brutal assault on the Jews during “Kristallnacht.”

Also known as “the Night of Broken Glass,” it’s one of the most closely scrutinized events in the history of Nazi Germany. Dozens of books have been published about the hours between Nov. 9 and 10, 1938, when Adolf Hitler and his propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, decided to unleash violence against Jews across Germany and the annexed territory of Austria with the aim of driving them out of the Third Reich.

Most accounts tend to emphasize the attacks on synagogues and shops, along with the mass arrests of 30,000 men. A few note the destruction of Jewish schools and cemeteries.

Attacks on Jewish homes, however, are barely mentioned.

It’s an aspect of the story that has rarely been researched and written about – until now.

A pattern emerges in survivor accounts

In 2008, when I arrived at the University of Southern California from Germany, I had been researching Nazi persecution of the German Jews for 20 years. I had published more than six books on the topic and thought I knew just about everything there was to know about Kristallnacht.

The university happened to be the new home of the Shoah Foundation and its Visual History Archive, which today includes over 55,000 survivor testimonies. When I started to watch interviews with German-Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, I was surprised to hear many of them talk about the destruction of their homes during Kristallnacht.

Details from their recollections sounded eerily similar: When Nazi paramilitary troops broke the doors of their homes, it sounded as though a bomb had gone off; then the men cut into the featherbeds, hacked the furniture into pieces and smashed everything inside.

In an interview recorded by USC’s Shoah Foundation that’s now in their Visual History Archive, Kaethe Wells explains how her family home was attacked by stormtroopers wielding axes during Kristallnacht.

Yet none of these stories appeared in traditional accounts of Kristallnacht.

I was perplexed by this disconnect. Some years later, I found a document from Schneidemühl, a small district in the East of Germany, that listed the destruction of a dozen synagogues, over 60 shops – and 231 homes.

These surprising numbers piqued my interest further. After digging into unpublished and published materials, I unearthed an abundance of evidence in administrative reports, diaries, letters and postwar testimonies.

A fuller picture of the brutal destruction of Jewish homes and apartments soon emerged.

For example, a Jewish merchant named Martin Fröhlich wrote to his daughter that when he arrived home the afternoon of that fateful November day, he noticed his door had been broken down. A tipped-over wardrobe blocked the entrance. Inside, everything had been hacked into pieces with axes: glass, china, clocks, the piano, furniture, chairs, lamps and paintings. Realizing that his home was now uninhabitable, he broke down and – as he confessed in the letter – started sobbing like a child.

A systematic campaign of destruction

The more I discovered, the more astonished I was by the scale and intensity of the attacks.

Using address lists provided by either local party officers or city officials, paramilitary SA and SS squads and Hitler Youth, armed with axes and pistols, attacked apartments with Jewish tenants in big cities like Berlin, as well as private Jewish homes in small villages. In Nuremberg, for example, attackers destroyed 236 Jewish flats. In Düsseldorf, over 400 were vandalized.

In the cities of Rostock and Mannheim, the attackers demolished virtually all Jewish apartments.

Documents point to Goebbels as the one who ordered the destruction of home furnishings. Due to the systematic nature of the attacks, the number of vandalized Jewish homes across Greater Germany must have been in the thousands, if not tens of thousands.

Then there are devastating details about the intensity of the destruction that emerge from letters and testimonies from postwar trials.

In Euskirchen, a house was burned to the ground.

In the village of Kamp, near the Rhineland town of Boppard, attackers broke into the house of the Kaufmann family, destroyed furniture and lamps, ripped out stove pipes, and broke doors and walls. When parts of the ceiling collapsed, the family escaped to a nearby monastery.

In the small town of Großauheim, located in the state of Hesse, troops used sledgehammers to destroy everything in two Jewish homes, including lamps, radios, clocks and furniture. Even after the war, shards of glass and china were found impressed in the wooden floor.

In an interview recorded by USC’s Shoah Foundation that’s now in their Visual History Archive, Ruth Winick recalls how men in green uniforms burst into her family’s home, destroying just about everything inside.

‘Everything ravaged and shattered’

The documents I found and interviews I listened to revealed how sexual abuse, beatings and murder were commonplace. Much of it happened during the home intrusions.

In Linz, two SA men sexually assaulted a Jewish woman. In Bremen, the SA shot and killed Selma Zwienicki in her own bedroom. In Cologne, as Moritz Spiro tried to stop two men from destroying his furniture, one of the intruders beat him and fractured his skull. Spiro died days later in the Jewish hospital.

In a letter dated Nov. 20, 1938, a Viennese woman described her family’s injuries to a relative:

“You can’t imagine, how it looked like at home. Papa with a head injury, bandaged, I with severe attacks in bed, everything ravaged and shattered… When the doctor arrived to patch up Papa, Herta and Rosa, who all bled horribly from their heads, we could not even provide him with a towel.”

The brutality of the attacks didn’t go unnoticed. On Nov. 15, the U.S. consul general in Stuttgart, Samuel Honaker, wrote to his ambassador in Berlin:

“Of all the places in this section of Germany, the Jews in Rastatt, which is situated near Baden-Baden, have apparently been subjected to the most ruthless treatment. Many Jews in this section were cruelly attacked and beaten and the furnishings of their homes almost totally destroyed.”

These findings make clear: The demolition of Jewish homes was an overlooked aspect of the November 1938 pogrom.

Why did it stay in the shadows for so long?

In the immediate aftermath of Kristallnacht, most newspaper articles and photographs of the violent event exclusively focused on the destroyed synagogues and stores – selective coverage that probably influenced our understanding.

Yet, it was the destruction of the home – the last refuge for the German Jewish families who found themselves facing heightened public discrimination in the years leading up to the pogrom – that likely extracted the greatest toll on the Jewish population. The brutal attacks rendered thousands homeless and hundreds beaten, sexually assaulted or murdered.

The brutal assaults also likely played a big role in the spate of Jewish suicides that took place in the days and weeks after Kristallnacht, along with the decision that tens of thousands of Jews made to flee Nazi Germany.

While this story speaks to decades of scholarly neglect, it is, at the same time, a testament to the power of survivor accounts, which continue to change the way we understand the Holocaust.The Conversation

Wolf Gruner, Shapell-Guerin Chair in Jewish Studies and Professor of History; Founding Director, USC Shoah Foundation Center for Advanced Genocide Research, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

==================================================================
This knowledge isn’t really new; it’s been in public records since it happened. But it has been “lost” by so much more emphasis being placed on the destruction of shops, synagogues, and other public buildings (possibly because those places are where the glass is.) So it’s probably new to many readers here, as it is to me.

But this adds in the imagination a new insight into how many people were actually involved, and the organization which went into it. Half a dozen crazies, no matter how motivated, cannot do that much to 231 homes in one night, to use a figure from one area. Further, those records kept by the SS which were used to find the homes to destroy must have been painstakingly collected over a goodly period of time. Well – today we have Facebook. Oh, yes, and voters’ records databases.

Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, not to be paranoid, but what should we do when we see this as a possibility under the current regime? Besides what we are already doing – fighting the regime with whatever skills and talents that we have.

The Furies and I will be back.

Share

  10 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #191”

  1. Media seems to skewed it to align with some of the conspiracy stories of the times related to money…today I saw a headline of similar destruction in a Jewish cemetery in Nebraska…it can indeed happen here, too

    • Can?  It has.  The Greenwood Massacre 1921.  The Rosewood Massacre 1923.  Those are probably the best known, but there are others.  Black towns destroyed down to the ground by white neighbors unable to tolerate their success.

      In Germany, the Jews were first, probably because of a history of centuries during which they had been persecuted.  For some reason, humans don’t harm en masse people who have harmed them en masse.  Instead, we harm those who have already been harmed by us.  Here in the United States, that’s also true.  Black people are at the top of the hate lists (and i’m sure visibility is a major factor, as well as unrepented slavery.)  Latinx next (and I suspect language is a visibility factor.)  The Jews are definitely on the list … but less visible.  Hence the hostile attention to synagogues and temples.  But, if we don’t get this turned around soon, more invasive attacks on Jewish people are coming too.

  2. omg, such a tragic and sad period living in those times.
     
    I most certainly will read, and re-read this, as…history can repeat itself, with all the pain and sorrow. Yes, those in control/power can foment their hatred here, as we’ve seen an uptick in violence these past couple of years. 

    Excellent post, and well done, Joanne. Thanks! 
    (and the Furies too.) 

  3. How awful to read of such horrific attacks on these innocent people, their homes, churches and businesses.
    What bothers me is to read how they mentioned that the people and their homes weren’t mentioned/thought of when the newspaper articles and photographs reported of these attacks. Are they blind??
    It frustrates me to read of such ignorance? Sorry to say we still see it in our current world events. happening way too often. 
    Great post. Thanks Joanne

  4. I hope the plaintive pledge of “Never Again!” will always hold true. 

    With Trump and his Storm Troopers, I’m not so certain anymore.

  5. Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it.

  6. I never knew of the home invasions and rapes.  I have a cousin named Spiro, and that name jumped out at me.
    Dumpy, and his Charlottesville “good people” carry this insanity with them! 

  7. My Jewish mother was born in Königsberg in East Prussia, then the eastern part of the German Empire, now called Kaliningrad and a Russian enclave. She has told me of the ransacking of Jewish homes during the Kristallnacht, and from then on really. Most Jewish people were transported to the camps or otherwise killed, almost the full population (2.2 million) of the area then fled for the Russian forces, bringing their own atrocities. The city enclave is Russian now, so there would have been no one to instigate any research on what happened in der Kristallnacht nor would there be many witnesses to ask.

    It is clear it happened everywhere. But make no mistake, the horrors of Kristallnacht aren’t isolated in time or culture, perhaps only in scale. All through the ages, minorities’ homes and lives have been ransacked by mobs, whipped into a frenzy by their leaders. Just think of the St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in which the slaughter began in Paris on the evening of St. Bartholomew’s Day and spread to the countryside on the following days. Between 40,000 and 100,000 Huguenots were butchered in cold blood.
    And how about the Rwandan genocide of 1994, when members of the Hutu ethnic majority in the east-central African nation of Rwanda murdered as many as 800,000 people, mostly of the Tutsi minority? All spurred on by their country’s leaders.

    History is full of such examples and I’m not convinced mankind has risen above that in such a short period. Rather, I’m sure it can happen any time with the wrong leaders at the helm.

    • And you are exactly why I said “new to many readers,” not just “new to readers.”  Though you hadn’t specifically mentioned this aspect. I would have bet that you knew.

      It’s time we all knew.

      In my replay to  JL above, I mention two massacres here and link to a page with several others.  It was never just isolated lynchings (or not-so-isolated lynchings) here either.  There were also orgies of destruction which very few Americans today are aware of.It’s almost as if the human race is bipolar, and those of us in it who aren’t are shocked when it goes off its meds.  And we think it must have been an aberration and don’t expect it to happen again   – a not unlikely defense mechanism probably.  But then we get shocked over and over again and nothing really changes.  But – something has to.  It has to.

  8. I’m glad you posted this JD.  I was thinking earlier that the difference between the brown shirts and Republican deplorables is that today’s terrorist riots will target Jews, Blacks, Latinos, Muslims, LGBTQ, and progressives. 18

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.