(Jewish Group) In Germany, Kristallnacht goes by a different name. Here's why.
This week, Jewish communities across the United States are commemorating the anniversary of Kristallnacht, the anti-Jewish riots that marked a brutal turning point in the Nazi campaign of persecution.
In Germany, cities and towns also will commemorate this day, but under a different name. They refer to the events of November 9-10, 1938, as the November Pogrom, or variations on that term. Thats became to many in Germany, the term Kristallnacht night of shattered glass sounds incongruous.
It has a pretty sound, said Matthias Heine, a German journalist whose 2019 book examined the role of Nazi terms in the contemporary German vernacular. When you know that it was a very serious and bloody and violent event, then this term isnt acceptable anymore.
That autumn night, government-coordinated anti-Jewish riots swept through virtually every town and city across Nazi Germany. Over several days, rioters destroyed hundreds of synagogues, looted thousands of businesses and killed at least 91 Jews; 30,000 Jewish men were sent to concentration camps.
---
In Germany, the terms November Pogrom, Pogromnacht or Reichspogromnacht were slowly introduced in the late 1970s, when Germanys postwar generations began challenging their parents sanitized version of history.
more...
I didn't know this.