MCC
Contact Us
  |  
College Directory
  |  
MCC News
  |  
A-Z Index
Rochester, NY
MCC MCC
prospective






Holocaust Genocide Studies Project
line
line

Kristallnacht Program 2007 line


photo of shattered windowKristallnacht or “Crystal Night”*

In November 1938, mass frenzy broke out in Austria and Germany. Synagogues were destroyed and burned, Jewish homes were assaulted, and Jewish-owned stores were shattered and looted. In many places, Jews were physically attacked. About 30,000 Jews—especially the influential and wealthy—were arrested and were thrown into concentration camps.

This was the first time that riots against the Jews of Germany, accompanied by mass detention, had been organized on such an extensive scale. Though the violent onslaught was officially terminated on November 10, in many places it continued for several days. In Austria, it started only on the morning of November 10 but was particularly fierce.

Every November, people around the world pause to remember Kristallnacht. The name Kristallnacht comes from Kristallglas (beveled plate glass) and refers to the broken shop windows of Jewish stores. (Kristallnacht was the Nazis' first experience of large-scale, anti-Jewish violence. It opened the way for the complete eradication of the Jews' position in Germany.

The annual Kristallnacht program hosted by the Holocaust Genocide Studies Project and the MCC Campus Activities Board is traditionally one of the major on-campus events of the fall semester. The event features internationally renowned guests, such as Lt.-General (retired) Roméo Dallaire, the United Nation’s commander in Rwanda during the 1994 genocide, and human rights advocate and educator Samantha Power, to share their perspectives about genocide and human rights, using the Holocaust as a touchstone. 

Planning for Holocaust Genocide Studies Project’s 16th annual Kristallnacht program will be completed during the Spring 2007 semester. Please visit this site again for future updates.

Source: Yad Vashem

Read a Democrat & Chronicle essay by Jodi Oriel and Charles Theis on Kristallnacht

 

line
line

Questions or comments

MCC-B161