Friday, November 9, 2012

German Nov. 9th

From Deutsche Welle:
"Germany marks its day of destiny"

November 9 has played an important role throughout Germany's history. DW takes a look at some important events that took place on that day. November 9, 1989 wasn't meant to be a watershed in German history. While the communist leadership of East Germany had decided to allow citizens to travel freely on that day, the change in policy was not supposed to take effect until November 10 to give border guards time to prepare. But Guenter Schabowski, a member of the East German politburo, who announced the decision at a press conference had not been present at the meeting. Asked by reporters when the new regulation would take effect, he said: "Immediately." Watching Schabowski's statement on television, thousands of East Berliners rushed to crossing points to West Berlin, where overwhelmed border guards soon decided to let them pass. Thus, November 9 yet again became a German "day of destiny" marking the first, triumphant steps towards the country's reunification. But while Germans had a reason to celebrate on that date in 1989, another event that took place 51 years earlier on November 9 remains one of the darkest in the country's history. Using the November 7, 1938 assassination of a German diplomat in Paris by a German-Polish Jew as an excuse, the so-called Reichskristallnacht two days later rang in the Nazis' brutal persecution of Jews that would eventually end in the murder of millions of people. While the 1935 Nazi race laws had already severely affected Jewish life in Germany, members of the Nazi SA militia across the country now torched synagogues and destroyed Jewish stores. About 100 people were killed during the pogrom and about 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and sent to concentration camps. Nazi leaders, including Adolf Hitler, had meanwhile gathered in Munich to commemorate the 15th anniversary of another November 9 event: Hitler's failed putsch attempt of 1923. Worried that other nationalistic, right-wing groups might overshadow his emerging Nazi party (NSDAP), Hitler and his followers on November 8 stormed a meeting of Bavarian government officials in a Munich restaurant and forced them at gunpoint to support his revolution. When the men revoked their agreement to cooperate a few hours later, Hitler led a march on the center of Munich, which was broken up by police. The NSDAP was banned as a result and Hitler ended up spending a few months in prison.  Unlike the other Nov. 9 events, the putsch attempt did not fall on that date by coincidence, according to Heinrich August Winkler, one of Germany's most renowned historians. Hitler's march on Munich took place exactly five years after the proclamation of the German republic by Social Democratic politician Philipp Scheidemann, which came just two days before the end of World War I. Another event significant for German history took place on November 9, 1848 - the execution of Robert Blum, a member of the Frankfurt national assembly, a legislative body meant to create a constitution for a unified Germany.
Ignoring his immunity as a parliamentarian, Blum was sentenced to death by Austria's imperial government after supporting Viennese revolutionaries. His execution showed the parliament's powerlessness and made Blum a symbol of the failed attempt to create a unified and free Germany.

^ It seems that November 9th should be viewed as a tragic date in German history with the only exception being the night the Berlin Wall fell. Another tragic event is that because the Berlin Wall fell on November 9th the events of Kristallnacht are often overlooked (especially in Berlin) and I think that is more important than the end of the Berlin Wall since Kristallnacht was the first, major, planned, violent event against the Jews during the Holocaust in which 11 million people were murdered by the Germans. To any reasonable person alive at the time -whether they lived in Germany, the UK, the US, etc - the events of that night would have told what was in store for German Jews (and any Jews that the Germans could get their hands on.) While in 1938 no one (except the Nazis) could have foreseen the creation of the death camps, death pits or death marches you would have seen the overt hatred and wish to kill Jews since many were killed and imprisioned. Both the German people and the rest of the world alive at that time are guilty of not doing more to stop the Nazis and help those groups that the Nazis targeted (ie the Jews, the disabled, homosexuals, the Freemasons, the Gypsies, etc.) November 9th should be a day that the German people take a moment to fully understand what their parents, grandparents and great-grandparents helped to start  - whether it was helping with the violence and murder or just standing by watching. ^

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