May 1, 2008
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Holocaust Remembrance
The Holocaust was arguably
among the most fearsome tragedies that have befallen the Jewish People in its long
history, in which six million Jews including one and a
half million children, were murdered.
Before World War II began, the German government sterilized 375,000 people. 17,000 of them
were deaf.“First they came for the Communists but I was not a Communist so I
did not speak out;
Then they came for the Socialists and the Trade Unionists but I was not
one of them,
so I did not speak out;
Then they came for the Jews but I was not Jewish so I did not speak out.
And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me.”
Martin Niemoller, 1892-1984
The Holocaust was a systematic, state-organized persecution of Jews and
other targeted groups by the Nazi state and its collaborators. During
the Holocaust two-thirds of Europe’s Jewish population was slaughtered
which calculates to one-third of the world population of Jews. In
addition, the Nazi’s genocide exterminated millions of Gypsies (Roma
and Sinti), Soviets, Polish citizens, Catholics, homosexuals,
handicapped, alcoholics, political and religious dissidents and Jehovah
Witnesses.The Holocaust is many times called by other names. The Nazi’s spoke
Kristallnacht: “The Night of Broken Glass or Crystal Night”
of it as die Endlosung or the “Final Solution” for the Jew’s
extermination. In the early 1940’s a Yiddish word churb’n, which means
“destruction”, was utilized. Others utilized the word Sho’ah that means
“catastrophe.”On November 9, 1938, Adolf Hitler attended a dinner party in Munich
Germany honoring Nazi party heroes. At the dinner he learned that Ernst
vom Rath, a German diplomat was killed in Paris. Leaving the dinner,
Hitler gave orders for a “night of terror throughout Germany, including
German-annexed Austria and the Sudenland region of Czechoslovakia.During the nights of November 9-10 more than 90 Jews were killed and
hundreds of synagogues and temples were set on fire. Throughout the
two-day period over 7000 Jewish businesses were looted without
intervention by the police. Additionally, Jewish cemeteries were
desecrated and over 30,000 Jewish men were placed under house arrest
and sent to concentration camps in Dachau, Buchenwald, and
Sachsenhausen.Noted as the worst pre-war program, the streets of Germany were
filled with shattered glass from the synagogues and store windows,
creating the name Kristallnacht or the “Night of Broken Glass.” When
the night was over, the German Jewish community was ordered to pay
repatriations to pay for the damage created by the acts of the Third
Reich. Blamed for the destruction, the Jews were fined one billion
Reichsmark, which is equal to $400,000,000 in United States currency.Protests erupted throughout the world surrounding Kristallnacht. In New
York, protesters asked for an intensification of existing boycotts of
German goods and services. Demonstrations called for an end to
“Hitler’s bloody pogroms.” In Chicago, protesters burned swastika
flags. Franklin D. Roosevelt, horrified by the actions of Hitler’s
Kristallnacht, proclaimed his shock that such actions could occur in
the 20th century and recalled the American ambassador from Germany.
Sadly however, few Americans advocated for changing the immigration
laws to increase quotas of Jewish immigrants from Europe.Hitler had no intention of being intimidated by the protests or the
boycotts. On January 30, 1939 Hitler declared that Germany was at war
and “the result will not be the bolshevization of the earth, and thus
the victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race of
Europe.”People killed
European Jews 5,6000,000 to 6,250,000
Soviet Prisoners 3,000,000
Polish Catholics 3,000,000
Serbians 700,000
Roma (Gypsies) 222,000 to 250,000
Political prisoners, journalists, teachers, activists 80,000
Handicapped & alcoholics 70,000
Homosexuals 12,000
Jehovah Witnesses 2,500
Like the Jews, the
Rom Gypsies were chosen for total annihilation just because of their race.
Even though Jews are defined by religion, Hitler saw the Jewish people
as a race that he believed needed to be completely annihilated. The Rom
Gypsies also were a nomadic people that were persecuted throughout history.
Both groups were denied certain privileges in many European countries.
The Nazis believed that both the Jews and Gypsies were racially inferior
and degenerate and therefore worthless. Like the Jews, the Gypsies were
also moved into special areas set up by the Nazis. Half a million Gypsies,
almost the entire Eastern European Gypsy population, was wiped out during
the Holocaust.Daniel
Laura Crist
And the child held her hand
A child tiny for almost eight,
Deep blue eyes that dominated his face,
When he explained new events to her,
that funny doggy,
that pretty rock,
And the freckles on his cheek,
No one saw a sunrise more perfect,
to her,
She so vividly smells the fragrance of
his hair,
his ears,
his breath in the morning
She vividly hears that little heartbeat,
that was hers
always hers,
and the laughter,
that raspy little laugh,
when he caught her in a conundrum.
All this,
But this is merely the surface,
As she watches her little one sheared,
and stripped,
For the gas chamber.
Comments (5)
thank you for posting this.I have always held the holocaust near to me.Learning about it at a very young age and just being in general horror that this happened.Hard to believe their are people out there that dont believe it happened at all.i am recommending this
I have read so much about the holocaust and everytime it turns my stomach. To think what hate can do to people. Another reason this world needs Jesus.
They’re coming for your kids. Haven’t heard you say anything.
@yorel - are you talking about the FLDS thing?
I learned about it very young .Once I fully understood. I was sadened. My uncle in law is Jewish. i will never forget. God bless you.