It’s sad that on the 70th anniversary of Kristallnacht, Ehud Olmert and Tzipi Livni felt compelled to mitigate their political vulnerabilities with offers of appeasement to Palestinian terrorists.
Political spin is not a sound replacement for national pride.
Translated literally from the English as the Night of Broken Glass, Kristallnacht was a pogrom in Nazi Germany in November 9-10. That night, 82 Jews were murdered and 25,000–30,000 were arrested and deported to concentration camps.
Olmert, Livni and Peres should listen up and learn from an event that happened this Friday in Berlin.
I got this item – courtesy of Joseph Bernadette.
The Rykestrasse synagogue in Berlin was torched on Kristallnacht. This past Friday saw rabbis bringing the Torah to the synagogue, in a ceremony witnessed by political leaders and Holocaust survivors from around the world. The synagogue, with a capacity to seat 1,200, has been described as one of the jewels of Germany’s Jewish community. Rabbi Chaim Roswaski, who presided at the ceremony ,described the reconstruction as “a miracle.” The re-opening comes at the start of a Jewish culture Festival this week in Berlin.
Your point about Olmert and Livni is well taken.
In our recent trip,we visited places in Greece and Turkey almost
devoid of Jewish inhabitants. But cemetaries,snagogues, and Jewish museums are maintained as tourist attaction and many Jewish tour groups
come there.
I guess this fancy shul in Berlin will be good for the touristb trade and
will encourage Jews to settle there. How exciting or how disgusting?
I doubt Jews would settle in Berlin because of the Rykestrasse shul was renovated but I imagine you are correct that it would be a tourist attraction.
All things being relative – I think it’s a good thing.
Danny