The Night of Broken Glass. Группа авторов
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5 5. Max Domarus, ed., Hitler. Reden und Proklamationen 1932–1945. Leonberg, 1988, vol. 2, p. 574 f.
6 6. Instructions to the press quoted from Peter Longerich, ‘Davon haben wir nichts gewusst!’ Die Deutschen und die Judenverfolgung 1933–1945. Berlin, 2006, p. 124.
7 7. Ruth Andreas-Friedrich, Der Schattenmann. Tagebuchaufzeichnungen 1938–1945. Berlin, 1947, p. 28 f.
8 8. For the most detailed account, see Angela Hermann, ‘Hitler und sein Stosstrupp in der “Reichskristallnacht”.’ In Viertelsjahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte 56(4) (October 2008), pp. 603–19; here, p. 606 f.
9 9. Hitler neither referred to the attack in his speech on the evening of 8 November in the Bürgerbräukeller nor spoke about it during the state funeral for Ernst vom Rath on 17 November in Düsseldorf. See ‘Die Fiktion eines spontanen Ausbruchs des Volkszorns gebot Schweigen’; Friedländer, op. cit., p. 300.
10 10. Ian Kershaw, Hitler. London, 2008, p. 461.
11 11. Die Tagebücher von Joseph Goebbels. Im Auftrag des Instituts für Zeitgeschichte und mit Unterstützung des Staatlichen Archivdienstes Rußlands, ed. Elke Fröhlich. Munich, 1993 ff., part 1, vol. 6, p. 178, entry for 9 November 1938.
12 12. Zum Judenproblem. Januar 1937. Quoted from Die jüdische Emigration aus Deutschland. 1933–1941. Die Geschichte einer Austreibung. Eine Ausstellung der Deutschen Bibliothek Frankfurt am Main, unter Mitwirkung des Leo Baeck Instituts. New York and Frankfurt am Main, 1985, p. 216.
13 13. Goebbels, Tagebücher, part I, vol. 6, p. 180, entry for 10 November 1938.
14 14. Quoted from Döscher, op. cit., p. 133.
15 15. Quoted from Die jüdische Emigration aus Deutschland, op. cit., p. 71.
16 16. Ibid., p. 68.
17 17. Ibid., p. 69 f.
18 18. Goebbels, Tagebücher, part I, vol. 4, p. 429, entry for 30 November 1937.
19 19. Quoted from Die jüdische Emigration aus Deutschland, op. cit., p. 71 f.
20 20. Goebbels, Tagebücher, part I, vol. 6, p. 180, entry for 10 November 1938.
21 21. According to the Supreme Court of the Nazi Party, in a decision issued on 13 February regarding the question of how Goebbels’s speech and the carrying out of the orders were to be understood. It was necessary to call upon the party’s court in order to fabricate a state of emergency and thus spare the perpetrators a criminal proceeding. Quoted from Der Prozess gegen die Hauptkriegsverbrecher vor dem Internationalen Militärgerichtshof (IMT), Nürnberg 1948, vol. 32, pp. 20–9.
22 22. Ibid.
23 23. Quoted from Friedländer, op. cit., p. 292.
24 24. Kershaw, op. cit., p. 458. ‘Disorder and uncontrolled violence and destruction were not the SS’s style.’
25 25. Facsimile in Döscher, op. cit., pp. 95–7.
26 26. Dachau: 10,911 deliveries; Buchenwald: 9,845 deliveries; Sachsenhausen an estimated 6,000–10,000 deliveries.
27 27. Goebbels, Tagebücher, part I, vol. 6, p. 182, entry for 11 November 1938.
28 28. Ibid.
29 29. Instructions to the press quoted in Longerich, op. cit., p. 125.
30 30. Quoted from Avraham Barkai, ‘ “Schicksalsjahr 1938”. Kontinuität und Verschärfung der wirtschaftlichen Ausplünderung der deutschen Juden.’ In Pehle, op. cit., p. 99.
31 31. It is all the more astounding that the stenographic record has still not been published in toto. The literature cites the partial record presented to the International Military Court in Nuremberg: IMT, op. cit., vol. 28, p. 499 ff. Cf. Döscher, op. cit., p. 123 f., there pp. 133–44.
32 32. Domarus, op. cit., vol. 3, p. 1058.
33 33. Harry Kaufman, unpublished manuscript (Houghton Library, Harvard University, bMS Ger 91, File 108); extracts from memoirs in this volume, pp. 231–5.
34 34. Both concepts were formed in connection with Auschwitz, but can be directly applied to the November pogroms. A good overview of the state of the question in Longerich, op. cit., pp. 7–21.
35 35. Longerich, op. cit., p. 24.
36 36. Ibid., p. 133.
37 37. November Pogrom 1938. Die Augenzeugenberichte der Wiener Library, London. Ed. Von Ben Barkow, Raphael Gross and Michael Lenarz. Frankfurt am Main, 2008.
38 38. Moritz Berger, unpublished manuscript (Houghton Library, Harvard University, bMS Ger 91, File 24).
39 39. On the approach of the organizers, the scholarly preparations, and the evaluation of the materials, see the Afterword, p. 236 ff.
40 40. Cf. the Bibliography, p. 275 ff.
41 41. Cf. the Editor’s Note, p. vii ff.
HUGO MOSES Manuscript 39 (159)
Born in the Rhineland in 1894; employed since 1920 by the Oppenheim Bank; married, two children; emigrated to the USA in 1939.
Exactly one year later, the greatest organized pogrom the world has ever seen occurred in Germany. The 1905 pogroms in Russia, the pogroms in Romania and in all the other countries of the world pale in comparison. The latter were only outflows of public opinion and their products, but this one was planned, organized and encouraged by the government. The preceding sufferings, privations, humiliations and horrors cannot be compared with what happened on this single night.
It was the harrowing night of 10 November 1938, when in Germany, in accordance with a very precisely elaborated plan, the homes and shops of Jews were senselessly vandalized, plundered, destroyed and put to the torch. On that night, synagogues and thousands of prayer halls and schools were set on fire at precisely the same time, and fire brigades and police all over Germany were not allowed to leave their quarters unless an express command to that effect had been given. In a single hour on that night, a horde of drunken animals in uniform wrecked the possessions, the past and the future of thousands of people, while bloodthirsty, savage, brutal creatures, decked out in and protected by the brown and black uniforms of the ruling party, slaughtered poor, tormented people in the thousands and sadistically abused thousands of wretched people.
I am going to describe one more time the events of that night, even if some of the details are already known, and even if hundreds of my poor fellow Jews may have suffered still more. I am going to describe them because the memory has still not grown fainter – although in the meantime a year and a half has gone by – and because they were the worst thing that the human mind could have imagined and carried out.
At the beginning of March 1938, all of the Jews in Germany had their passports confiscated. On 27 April 1938, we Jews in Germany who had more than 5,000 marks had to declare our possessions in cash, real estate, jewellery and so on.
In mid-October 1938, I met with a man from Berlin with whom I had had many business dealings, and