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A prelude to horror

The evocative testimonies from victims of Kristallnacht

December 3, 2015 13:38
November 10 1938: Three onlookers at a smashed Jewish shop window in Berlin following riots of the night of November 9

ByDavid Robson, David Robson

5 min read

The thousands of books, the billion-fold repetition of the word, the endless aggregation of memorialisation of the Holocaust can have a dulling rather than heightening effect. What more that is new can be said? What can we learn that we do not already know? What have we not seen? What have we not heard? How can those too young to remember - the vast majority - comprehend?

Remarkably, this year has answered those questions not once, but twice. In April, 70 years late, the documentary film, German Concentration Camps Factual Survey, was finally assembled and released. Composed of footage shot by Allied army film crews going into the camps after liberation, it shows the most terrible things imaginable. In fact, no work of imagination in words or pictures has shown us anything like what the British cameramen filmed during weeks at Belsen - horrors of which, till then, the world knew little. Made to be shown to Germans, to confront them with what had been done in their name, it was never finished. Politicians decided the moment to show it had passed. Perhaps that was providential. Seeing fresh today what they were so shocked to find then brings the past into the present.

Now we have the publication of Pogrom - November 1938, a 750-page book about Kristallnacht. If Belsen was the end, Kristallnacht was the end of the beginning, when the ever-increasing oppression of Jews in Germany and Austria erupted in an orgy of fury and destruction. The numbers were shocking enough - 1,200 synagogues and thousands of Jewish shops, businesses and homes, destroyed, looted and burned; more than 90 people killed, 25,000 men detained, arrested and sent to concentration camps for torturous weeks and months. But numbers alone hardly begin to tell the story and Kristallnacht was soon dwarfed by what followed. As the book's editor Ruth Levitt writes in her introduction: "For most people alive today, particularly for young people in Europe and North America, the November events may be no more than a seemingly obscure incident occupying a few sentences in a history book." Among the collection of international press reports from that week, ranging from German and Austrian Nazi celebration to British condemnation, the book includes a long editorial from the Spectator headed The New Barbarism. It sums up Kristallnacht in one sardonic and tragically prophetic sentence: "It is true that Jews in Germany have not been formally condemned to death; it has only been made impossible for them to live."

Pogrom-November 1938 is a collection of 356 testimonies from people who experienced the nightmare of Kristallnacht many of whom were then arrested and sent to Dachau, Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen, where they experienced extreme brutality and witnessed worse. As the commandant of one of the camps said in his address to them: "You are not in a prison here, nor a jail - prisons and jails are humane. We are not humane!"