answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Some lost faith in god as they couldn't understand how a benevolent god could do such a thing to them - proving God didn't exist.

Some believe the Holocaust was a test and have regained their faith in God

Some blame human free will for the holocaust and the Shoah urged them to do good

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

They realized that they were not physically safe in Germany and tried to leave the country. (On the whole, politically aware Jews had known this since 1933 and had left before the Kristallnacht if they were able to).

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

9y ago

Some Jews were talking about leaving Germany. Some other didn't take it straight. When the killings began, it was too late.

It all happened on November 9, 1938 when violence against Jews broke out across the Reich. It appeared to be unplanned anger over the assassination of a German official in Paris at the hands of a Jewish teenager but the fact was that German Propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and other Nazis carefully organized the pogroms. The morning after, German Jewish men were arrested for the crime of being Jewish and sent to concentration camps.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

On the night of Kristallnacht it is written that the Jews were helpless and scared and simply had to stand and watch as their businesses and Synagogues were burned down. This is not true, however, as research shows that Jews and their German neighbours fought together to rid themselves of their attackers. In fact, most of the Jews didn't even know what was going on and slept through the night, living life as normal the next day.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago

Issue of Non-Culpability

The way that this question is phrased would offend numerous people because it assumes that the Jews were guilty of committing some sort of offense and were therefore rightfully castigated. While it is not true to say that Jews were innocent lambs, the Jews did not do half of the negative nonsense that is attributed to them in order to "justify" Anti-Semitism and violence against them. Jews have been punished for being different, unique, and misunderstood and ever did anything worth punishing them for in the same way that Africans (on the whole) never did anything to merit enslavement. These actions were taken on account of bigotry and self-supremacy, not based on any system of equitable justice.

Issues Asserted by Nazis

The Nazis' primary issues with Jews were the unfounded and erroneous assertions of which the following is a general list:

1) Decay of the German State: During the 1800s, Jews and other minorities began to become more integrated in German National Life. They served in its government, its military divisions, and its industry. As was typical of Western Europe, the Jews had more of a hand in the higher echelons of government than their population percentage would account for. Hitler saw this increasing Jewish percentage in the government as a slow takeover of German policy and a corruption of the German people. They contrasted the great victories under Bismarck with the depressing failure of World War I and noted how a much larger percentage of soldiers in the latter war were Jewish. There was also the sentiment than in the early 20th century, values were beginning to ebb (this is similar to current politics in the United States) and the Jewish integration in the German apparatus (becoming teachers, lawyers, doctors, etc.) was to blame for this recession of values as opposed to modernity as a process.

2) Nationalism: Germany was brought together under the Nationalist conception that all peoples with German culture, history, and language should be united regardless of which principality currently held control. The German self-conception also had an ethnic component, holding that the perfect German was blond and blue eyed. Regardless of the fact that the majority of Germans were dark haired, Jews and Gypsies stuck out like sore thumbs because they overwhelmingly had darker hair. In addition, the idea of a German Jew was still rather new and both Jews and non-Jews tended to see the Jews in Germany as being part of a vast Jewish network and that these Jews just happened to be in Germany. The same perception existed for Gypsies, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Communists. Hitler capitalized on this cosmopolitan sensibility by claiming that these people's allegiances were not to the German State, but to secret councils made up of these minorities that conspired against the German people.

3) Economy: Whether it was true or not, there was perception among Germans and Hitler in particular that Jews were wealthy individuals and had a higher per-capita income than the Germans. In many ways (because of the above two reasons) Germans felt that the Jews were "stealing" their money while they were poor and suffering.

4) Pseudo-Science: The late 19th and early 20th century was filled with radical new ideas concerning Social Darwinism, a movement that Hitler was a part of. It was believed by the Pseudo-Scientific community (which was rather in vogue) that different groups of people or races exhibited different emotional traits that were linked to physical differences. This led to the belief that Jews and Gypsies were corrupt and thieving by their irreversible nature and that they could not be "cured" and brought up as proper Europeans. This formalized Racism in Germany and made the situation much more dire for German minorities.

5) Heresy: Although not as much an issue in World War II as it may have been 500 years prior, Jews were still considered the heretics who murdered the LORD and Savior. This helped to justify Anti-Semitism as the Jewish comeuppance for their accepting of the Christ Bloodguilt.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

The Night of Broken Glass was the beginning of Hitler's "Final Solution". Prior to this event, the Nazis subtly began to create hostility to the social differences between the Aryans and the Jews living in Germany. The Night of Broken Glass was the culmination of this disguised hostility which led to the exportation of Jews to concentration camps.

So in a nutshell, the Kristallnacht was the beginning of the Holocaust spread over the Third Reich.

____

'disguised hostility'? No, it had been very public and also very obsessive. It been a central doctine of the Nazi regime. The key point about the Night of Broken Glass is that it made it very clear to German Jews that they were no longer physically safe inGermany. Some had been well aware of this ever since Hitler came to power in 1933, but some - especially those who took no interest in politics - had not. See the related questions.

____

I am sorry if the terminology I used was obscure. The disguised hostility I was referring to was to the world around Germany. Up until that point, Germany, under the guidance of Hitler, worked to cover up this hatred. But on the Night of Broken Glass, this hatred was unveiled. I am not denying in any way the physical danger to the German Jews. I was looking at it from the angle of how Kristallnacht changed the world's interest in Germany's affairs.

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How did the Jews react to the Kristallnacht?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Why did Hitler order Kristallnacht?

Hitler ordered Kristallnacht as an excuse to get rid of Jews, or capture Jews that had been individually selected to be arrested.


Which event resulted in the mass removal of Jews to nazi concentration camps?

Implementation of Kristallnacht


By the end of kristallnacht how many Jews were in concentration camps?

During the Kristallnacht and the days that followed about 30,000 German Jews were sent to concentration camps.


What was the Nazis rampage against the Jews?

The Nazis had a major problem with the Jews and this is still remembered many years later. The rampage took place in 1938 and it is called the Kristallnacht.


How many Jews were killed in the kristallnacht?

According to official Nazi figures, 91 Jews were killed on Kristallnacht, historic research has shown that the figure was approximately 400.


How did kristallnacht demonstrates Nazi the persecution of Jews?

By the issue that it was an action of Nazis against Jews.


What did society learn from kristallnacht?

Society does not learn. It was portrayed that Kristallnacht was the fault of the Jews and they were made to pay to clean up afterwards.


What is the kristallnacht and the Nuremberg laws?

it treated the Jews very badly and the Jews didn't have freedom of speech


Why might Kristallnacht be considered a turning point in the Nazi treatment of the Jews?

It was the first 'popular' mistreatment of Jews.


Members of the nazi party burned and destroyed businesses owned by jews?

Kristallnacht


What was the night in which a destructive nazi rampage against the Jews took place?

Kristallnacht


Which resulted in the mass removal of Jews to Nazi concentration camps?

Implementation of Kristallnacht