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A Bridge Walk to Remember as Kristallnacht Anniversary Nears

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By Grace Bennett

Two sister organizations devoted to Holocaust education – whose programming promoting tolerance typically take place from opposite sides of the Hudson River –are collaborating to present Kristallnacht: Bridge Walk to Remember, a solidarity walk on the Gov. Mario M. Cuomo Bridge to commemorate the 83rd anniversary of Kristallnacht. 

The walk this Sunday, Nov. 7, starting at 9 a.m. is co-sponsored by the Holocaust & Human Rights Education Center (HHREC) and the Holocaust Museum & Center for Tolerance and Education. It is to remember and honor the victims, survivors and rescuers of the Kristallnacht pogroms and the Holocaust.

“Just as we will be taking in the beauty of the Hudson River, we can also remember back to 1938 when synagogues and storefronts of Jews were broken into and burned down,” said Millie Jasper, executive director of the HHREC in White Plains. 

The Holocaust Museum recently opened at Rockland Community College.

“Participants may walk some or all of the Gov. Mario Cuomo bridge, however far they wish,” said Jasper, in remembrance of the terrible events which transpired between Nov. 9 and 10 in 1938, oft referred to as “Night of Broken Glass.” 

As a child of survivors, I plan to walk, too. My dad, Jacob Breitstein (who passed away at 97 in 2019) survived Auschwitz and the Holocaust but his mother and four siblings were killed.

My father references Kristallnacht in the opening to his unpublished memoir when he comes upon a group of destitute deportees from Germany in his hometown in Lodz. 

“Last week I was a wealthy man in Germany, and this line I’m standing in is a soup kitchen! The Germans came into my store, told me to go outside, put me on a train, and here I am. I couldn’t comprehend what happened. It must have been Kristallnacht.” 

Kristallnacht is notorious for the solidifying, if you will, of a nation’s descent into total madness and for the continuing downward spiral toward the massive destruction of the Holocaust. But it’s erroneous to think of Kristallnacht as some sole trigger of the Holocaust, explained Steve Goldberg and Julie Scallero, HHREC’s co-directors of education during a discussion about Kristallnacht.

“From Kristallnacht, yes, the Nazi agenda begins to accelerate, and less than a year later, we have World War II,” said Goldberg. “But Nov. 9 was not an arbitrarily selected date, either. The Kaiser abdicates on Nov. 9, 1918, as Germany loses World War I. On Nov. 9, 1923, Hitler’s smaller Nazi party fails to overthrow the government in Munich and Hitler is sent to prison where he writes ‘Mein Kampf,’ the rantings of a madman, and is eventually released.”

“Kristallnacht was thus very calculated,” said Goldberg, which was revenge against Germany’s losses and Nazi failure. 

The breaking, burning, beating and murdering took place all over Germany and in Nazi-occupied territories in Austria and Czechoslovakia, too. 

The deportations “were a foreshadowing, with so many Jews being put on trains, and dropped callously at the Polish border, told to get out,” said Scallero.

One such victim of the deportations sent word to her son in Paris of their family’s urgent plight. Infuriated, Herschel Grynszpan, made his way to the embassy in Paris, where he shot a German diplomat, Ernst vom Rath, who soon died. Soon after, Joseph Goebbels, propaganda minister for the Nazi regime, greenlighted the pogrom carried out by the Sturmanteilung (SA) aka the “Brown Shirts.”

And so, we remember. 

To mark Kristallnacht, the Congregation B’nai Yisrael community and seventh-graders who are studying the Holocaust are having a conversation on Wednesday, Nov. 10 via Zoom with Hannah Deutch, member of the HHREC Speakers Bureau. Hannah experienced Kristallnacht as a young child in Germany.

On Nov. 14, the HHREC will present “Holocaust Memory and Racial Healing” via Zoom featuring Susan Neiman, director of the Einstein Forum and author of “Learning from the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil.” The event is free and open to the public. To register and receive a link, write to sgoldberg@hhrecny.org/

For more information about Kristallnacht: Bridge Walk to Remember, contact the HHREC at 914-696-0738 or mjasper@hhrecny.org or visit www.hhrecny.org. You many also contact the Holocaust Museum & Center for Tolerance and Education at 845-574-4099 or visit www.holocauststudies.org. Registration to the walk, which begins on the Westchester side, is limited to 75 participants.

Grace Bennett is a Chappaqua resident and publisher of The Inside Press.

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