This was a very hard book to read, not because it wasn’t well written but because it was well written – on a very tough issue. The chapter on Reichskristallnacht (the Night of Broken Glass) brought tears to my eyes to the point where I had to pause absorbing the horrifying stories. This is despite previously reading much about this appalling night.
1938 is a book that takes the reader month by month through the start of WWII and the steady attack on Jews, not just in Germany by the Nazi’s but by other countries and countries from Brittan to the Netherlands closing their country from Jews trying to flee such anti-Sematic activities. Giles Macdonogh demonstrates that different decisions early could have rewritten history; Hitler was not confident in his efforts, had divisions within his leadership, and concerned about world views of their actions. Britton and other countries didn’t measure up to the problems facing humanity and continued to fail even with small concessions to save humans who were Jewish later.
Early in the book – and in Hitler’s quest for power – the author reviewed how Austria’s Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg had been called in by Hitler. The chancellor was worried and told Vienna Mayor Richard Schmitz that he was to take over if anything happened to him when he went to visit the supreme leader. It was reported Hitler’s outbursts could be heard from the floor below despite the door being shut while the Austrians met. The chancellor made concessions during lunch but then Hitler pushed him even further. The minority Nazis of Austria could forward again, continuing to take control. At the same time, Hitler was reaching out to Poland, trying to comfort them so he could build power. As Hitler continued to put pressure on Austria, he later “performed the first invasion by telephone in history,” because the government folded opposition and the leader left the country. Contrasting that, Viennese Mayor Schmitz was arrested when he refused to hang a swastika from city hall. Prior to his success, Macdonogh points to Hitler as unable to give commands or deal with the stress.
Jews fled, including driving to the Czech boarder and walking through the woods, leaving nearly everything behind. Many took trains to Brno. Sometimes Jews gave the Heil Hitler in their best German accents to disguise their true movement to flee because they were Jews. Bribes often worked. Sometimes they just left behind their car – and walked the rest of the way to freedom.
Countries and cities left behind were “de-Jew” according to Goebbels plans. Books were burned. Music was changed. Restaurants were required to hang signs banning Jews. Increasingly violence was directed at Jews, including requiring them to do humiliating tasks like requiring them to drink from a spittoon. In Berlin, Jews were restricted to one swimming pool, a few restaurants and cinemas. The hatred for Jews was so strong, Hitler signed the decree outlawing Jewish doctors in Austria despite that half of all doctors were Jewish. Jews even loss the right to serve in the military. What was heart breaking was this was after many of these Jewish families had served their country for centuries, viewing themselves as Germans or Austrians or Czechs but also as Jewish.
The book outlined how Hitler’s crew didn’t get along with one another. While Eichmann wanted the Jews out as quickly as possible, using some Jewish people’s funds to finance the others to leave Germany, Goring was grabbing the money for himself. The later violence against Jews caused many to lose their traveling documents. Jews were trying to find a home that was accepting of them, with most wanting to go to Palestine. Yet, Brittan was concerned about the “strong Arab demands for the complete stoppage” of Jewish immigrants. They put the cap at 75,000 Jews. Some 26,080 Jews stuck in India at the end of the war. By Summer, legal immigration for Jews was cut off. They could only escape with bribes, being baptized or other tricky means.
All this time, the author points out, most churches were silent. Some went along with the Nazis, including ringing church bells, to keep them from being the target. The Lutheran Church in Germany remained largely silent. Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote, “She was silent when she should have cried out because the blood of the innocent was crying aloud to heaven.” Archbishop Lang started Sunday prayers for Jews in July. Quakers played a positive, brave role repeatedly, including securing the passage of over 4,000 out of unsafe areas. This is also the time when some Jews were sent to Ethiopia.
The wreckage of communities is the hidden story in this book. The author states that there were 26,236 Jewish businesses in Austria. All were destroyed by the antisemitic attacks, hurting the Austrian economy.
When Germany, France and the British met for another conference, the later allied parties once again failed; Chamberlain again failed. The powers saw that Hitler was prepared for war. He had kept the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia out of the discussions. Hitler even thought this would provide him the possibility of ridding the British and French forever.
Then there was the Night of Broken Glass on November 9-10, 1939. This book indicated that Goebbels led the effort, hoping to increase Jewish plight. Hitler played the denial card, worried mostly about international opinion. He was ready to fully engage. Hitler ordered 25,000 to 30,000 Jews were to be arrested. The Nazi produced thugs destroyed synagogues, burning those not connected with non-Jewish buildings, destroyed a Jewish hospital in Nuremberg, and a Jewish children’s home in Caputh. The mostly drunken hoodlums shot some Jewish people. For the first time, women were also the target of violence. Some Jews committed suicide, seeing such hatred and violence directed at them. And, some Gentiles spoke up for Jews. But, most didn’t.
The massive night of violence sent the clear signal to Jews that they were no longer welcomed and risked their lives and culture. Ironically, as the author points out, it also slowed the immigration of many Jews because the attack also destroyed many of the papers needed for Jews to leave the country. Destroying 76 synagogues entirely, setting another 191 on fire, destroying over 800 businesses and 117 private homes, closing down over 4,000 Jewish businesses and confiscating nearly 2,000 buildings from Jews and stealing their valuables also caught the attention of the international community. It also split Hitler’s leaders, with Goring upset that it was making it even harder to secure foreign currency and get Jews out of their area due to the loss of documents. Goebbels was on the other side, full of such hate he wanted the Jews to demolish the damaged synagogues.
The author also did a good job outlining some of the issues of those Jews who were getting out – or getting their children out of harms way. Many Jewish children who arrived in Britain without their parents were placed with families that were not Jewish, converting some and simply not celebrating their heritage with others. She reported that only 1,000 children were placed with Jewish foster parents of the 9,000 children who arrived.
By November 11th, Jews were excluded from business ownership, being able to attend theaters or German schools or universities. Their right to drive were revoked, were forbidden to go to cafes and restaurants, had their assets stolen from them, including jewelry except their wedding rings, and couldn’t be in the military.
The author ends the book by speaking about how Hitler was mostly alone but had a quest for more power, with a cabinet and usually not awake until lunchtime, spending his time reading fiction and watching movies. The economy was in shatters, although the author didn’t do the work to share what that meant and how he still fed his war machine. She did point out a major point in the closing of her book: “…that Chamberlain’s choosing not to fight – although utterly practical – was a disaster for the world.” What she didn’t remind the reader is that the real disaster was after WWI, the world allowed Germany to build a war machine that violated their agreement while most other nations shifted expenses away from defense, allowing Chamberlain to be in such a weak position and permitting Hitler to take advantage of those earlier decisions.
There were some wild facts shared in this book, including:
• French foreign minister Yvon Delbos once talked about sending Poland’s 3.5 million Jews to Madagascar.
• Gobbels, who had sex with at least one Jew, approved of the death penalty for Rassenchander, a gentile who slept with a Jew.
• There were some quiet heroes in the crisis, including Chinese consul-general Ho Fengshan who moved 4,000 Jewish residents to Shanghai. His driving force was that he as a Christian and believed it was the right thing to do.
This book was a quick read worth the time but not a book to truly understand the dynamics and consequences of WWII.