Over half of the passengers who boarded the Voyage of the St. Louis survived, and under half died during this tragic event. Before the St. Louis, when St. Louis sailed to Cuba, and escaping the St. Louis are all important events at the time of the Holocaust. Killing hundreds of people, the Voyage of the St. Louis was a terrible catastrophe during the Holocaust. The Kristallnacht was said to be the beginning of the Holocaust and what started the Voyage of the St. Louis. It was a bad way to start off the boarding and sailing of the St. Louis. The Kristallnacht also referred as the “Night of Crystal” or the “Night of Broken Glass” destroyed about 7,000 homes and hundreds of synagogues in Germany. The Nazi troops arrested thousands of people in
Kristallnacht was a savage night where hundreds where murdered. In addition, Kristallnacht means the night of broken glass in German, and The Night of Broken Glass occurred on the night of November 9th until November 10th. Kristallnacht took place in small parts of Austria, Sudentland, and all over Germany in addition discrimination of the Jews had dated all the way back to 1935 by Germans. Two years before Kristallnacht, Jews were treated unfairly and ignored by the society, furthermore Germans did not allow Jews attend public parks and in 1936, Jews were banned to come see the Olympic Games which were held in Germany at the time. Kristallnacht got its nickname The Night of Broken Glass due to the fact that during November 9th and 10th rioters and police, violent and extreme, sh...
The Holocaust was a horrible time for everyone involved, but for the Jews it was the worst. The Jews no longer had names they became numbers. Also they would fight and the S.S. would watch and enjoy. They lost all personal items, then forced to look and dress the same. This was an extremely painful and agonizing process to dehumanize the Jews. Which made it easier to take control of the Jews and get rid of them.
Synagogues were set on fire and burnt to the ground as firemen stood at standby watching. They would interfere and take action only to prevent the fire from spreading to non-Jewish buildings while leaving the Jewish buildings to burn. Jewish businesses were either burnt down or had their windows broken. In the majority of the cases, both occurred when they were destroyed. While illegal, looting took place in many cases as well. That is where the name Kristallnacht comes from, as it roughly means, “night of broken glass.” The streets were literally strewn with shards of broken glass from the destructive attacks. Around 25,000 to 30,000 men were arrested and taken to concentration camps for being Jewish. In the concentration camps, they would often be brutalized and sometimes randomly chosen to be beaten to death. German official hoped that the trip to the concentration camp would “break their resistance and thereby force them to immigrate.” (The Danish Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies) At that time, the ‘Final Solution’ of the Third Reich had not been created and implemented. Kristallnacht left nothing but the few remaining items of the victims along with the ruins of their homes, their religious buildings, and their businesses. Reinhard Heydrich reported to Hermann Goering after the events of November 9th,
On November 9th,1938, there was a major change in the lives of many Jews that lived in Germany. This night will forever be known as the Kristallnacht. In German, “Kristall” translates to crystal and “Nacht” translates to night. In English, it translates to “ The Night of Broken Glass.” The Kristallnacht was one of the worst times in history due to reasons behind why Hitler chose to stage the event, the extensive property damage and violence that occurred, and the affect on the Jews after that evening.
BIOGRAPHICAL DATA: William Hermanns was born on the 23rd of July 1895 in Koblenz, Germany to a merchant family. His parents were Michael and Bertha. Mr. Hermanns was highly educated with a M.A. from the University of Berlin and he continued school to receive s Ph.D. from University of Frankfurt. His career consisted of a being a German soldier during world war one from 1915 to 1920. He was released as a French prisoner of war in 1920 and was prepared for a diplomatic career in the League of Nation. He escaped his homeland in 1934 because of the rule of Hitler. He then began as a researcher at Harvard University and lectured during the summer sessions. William worked towards a professional occupation of being a professor. Mr. Hermanns worked for the Office of Strategic Services in Washington D.C.
Holocaust Facts The Holocaust has many reasons for it. Some peoples’ questions are never answered about the Holocaust, and some answers are. The Holocaust killed over 6 million Jews (Byers.p.10.) Over 1.5 million children (Byers, p. 10). They were all sent to concentration camps to do hard labor work.
Kristallnacht, a wave of violent anti-Jewish pogroms, took place on November 9 and 10, 1938 and is often referred to as the "Night of Broken Glass." Organized by Goebbels and Heydrich, head of the Security Service, the campaign of violence resulted in the destruction of many synagogues and thousands of Jewish businesses. Nazis in Germany torched synagogues, vandalized Jewish homes, schools and businesses, killed close to 100 Jews, and sent more than 30,000 to Nazi concentration camps. Starting on November 9 and continuing into the next day, Nazi mobs vandalized and even burned down hundreds of synagogues throughout Germany and damaged, if not completely destroyed, thousands of Jewish homes, schools, businesses, hospitals and cemeteries.
The Holocaust has played a significant part of many people lives living in Germany. During the Holocaust, the Night of the Broken Glass occurred; A night of terror for many Jewish people changing the lives of them all. The Holocaust started with the laws leading up to the Night of the Broken Glass; the lack of German reaction or outrage and the lack of response from the world to these efforts to discriminate and persecute the Jews allowed the Nazis to eventually proceed to the final solution.
The beginning of World War II the Nazis killed 90 Jews and 30,000 were sent to concentration camps. It was the beginning of war and it got worse for a lot of people. Things that affected people in World War II were the Frank family and a lot of Jewish families.
During the night of Kristallnacht many Jewish shops, synagogues, and houses were destroyed by German Nazis. The nazis were instructed to destroy and ruin any Jewish property but cannot hurt the Jewish. This night affected the Jewish financially, emotionally, and socially.
At the anniversary celebration in Munich, Hitler was said to have been overheard saying, “The SA should be allowed to have its final fling,” with Propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels broadly hinting that demonstrations against Jews would not be opposed by the party. As a result, the SA, also known as the storm troopers, and other party radicals, already eager to have their way with the Jews, took to the streets all across Germany and its occupied territories, burning Jewish synagogues, vandalizing and destroying Jewish shops, schools, businesses, and homes. It was the shattered glass that covered the sidewalks and streets that attributed to the event’s title, Kristallnacht, which literally meant “crystal night.” Approximately 91 Jews were killed, with more than 30,000 Jewish men later arrested and sent to concentration camps. This event became a turning point in the Nazi regime’s policy towards the Jews. Kristallnacht ushered in a new era of more intense and repressive anti-Semitic legislature that would eventually lead to the creation of extermination camps and the mass murder of European
The disastrous World War II began on September 1st 1939. The devastating Holocaust was in full swing around this time and only got worse soon after. This mortifying pogrom assassinated an overwhelming amount of people, injured so many others, and continually haunts the lives of the survivors. As terrible an event that this was, thankfully some were saved. Many youth escaped the destructiveness of war through the great Kindertransport.
The Holocaust during the years of 1993-1945, was a time of despair since it involved persecution and murder. It took many years to defeat the Nazis and rescue the few Jews that were left. After World War II, the Jews were able to to go back home. Though, their return wasn't very welcoming. Close your eyes and imagine coming back to your home and see others living in there or is no longer there. This is what the survivors of the Holocaust came to after the inhuman conditions and situations they were put. Because the people who took over their houses were embarrassed and if you recall, people who are afraid are most likely to humiliate others to hide that they are afraid. To add on, there were pogroms, or riots where the town gathered around to kill the Jews that came back home. Despite the Holocaust being over, the non-Jewish people did not accept the Jews coming back to their homes, and they often persecuted and sometimes killed them.
The Holocaust was A systematic murder of 6 million jews (Strahinich 7). The Holocaust took place during World War 2 between January 30, 1933 – May 8, 1945 (Strahinich 7). It took place primarily in Germany and Poland (Strahinich 32).The Nazis and the Jews were involved in the Holocaust (Strahinich 43).
street for people to walk on and see. This was the beginning of the end of Jewish social and their everyday life. After this horrific event, the lives of Jews all across Europe changed dramatically for the worse. A quote about this event states “The events of Kristallnacht or dangerous, destructive, and disturbing”.That quote from Alex Baez shows and describes the night of broken