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MikeStuchbery_'s profile
Mike Stuchbery 💀🍷
Mike Stuchbery 💀🍷
Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷
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@MikeStuchbery_

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Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷Verified account

@MikeStuchbery_

Writer, Journalist & Teacher. Sometimes does stuff for @TheLocalEurope.

mikestuchbery.carrd.co
Joined June 2014

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    Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

    This week is the 80th anniversary of the night of violence commonly known as ‘Kristallnacht’, but also known as the ‘Novemberpogrome’ or the ‘Reichspogromnacht’. It was fueled and enabled by a (mostly) democratically elected government. Here’s what you need to know. THREAD /1pic.twitter.com/Kn8RZxtAyK

    2:57 AM - 6 Nov 2018
    • 1,043 Retweets
    • 1,016 Likes
    • Sabine Slaughter Lisa Helgenberg Boris Johnson is a liar juzar maimoon Mario Keko peter gilmartin J. Levine Food For Worms Lorraine O'Mahoney 💙 #stopcancer #purplesummer
    37 replies 1,043 retweets 1,016 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Having come to power in 1933, the Nazi Party took advantage of an arson attack on the Reichstag building to introduce the Enabling Act, allowing the cabinet to make significant policy with no government involvement. A primary goal was the disenfranchisement of German Jews. /2pic.twitter.com/zHV0JWFgAA

        7 replies 58 retweets 114 likes
        Show this thread
      3. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        From beginnings with exclusion from universities and schools, Nazi policy against Jews led to hefty restrictions in business, public government participation and use of public services. The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 further restricted citizenship, marriage and employment rights. /3pic.twitter.com/qPVuriBryi

        2 replies 43 retweets 90 likes
        Show this thread
      4. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        In late 1938, the Nazi regime felt emboldened enough to further marginalize the German Jewry through deportations. Those targeted were Jews of Polish heritage, even if they were born in Germany. Thousands were sent to Poland, who would not accept most, making them stateless. /4pic.twitter.com/KhspJ0SllG

        4 replies 42 retweets 89 likes
        Show this thread
      5. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        The parents of Herschel Grynszpan were among those deported. Living in France, he purchased a revolver and bullets, and travelled to the German Embassy, where he demanded to see an official. When he was taken to Ernst von Rahm, he shot him five times, seriously wounding him. /5pic.twitter.com/jhcjHHom36

        3 replies 29 retweets 75 likes
        Show this thread
      6. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        The Nazi regime took advantage of this development by further restricting the rights of German Jews. Among other things, their newspapers were banned. The communication networks that the Jewish community used to communicate and inform one another were severed. /6

        2 replies 30 retweets 73 likes
        Show this thread
      7. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Ernst von Rahm died on the 9th of November, 1938, from his injuries. When the Nazi high command heard about this, propaganda minister Josef Goebbels gave a speech saying that there would not be a formal retaliation, but ‘protests’ would not be stopped by the authorities. /7pic.twitter.com/EvDC1yUNdt

        4 replies 29 retweets 69 likes
        Show this thread
      8. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Secret instructions were also dispatched to the SS - non-Jewish businesses and facilities were not to be touched, as well as foreigners. At this point, the SA (Stormtroopers), Hitler Youth and other Nazi organizations across Germany were informed of the news. /8

        2 replies 28 retweets 68 likes
        Show this thread
      9. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        All across Germany, Jewish businesses were smashed, their contents looted and owners brought out into the streets to receive a beating. Over several thousand were almost totally destroyed by SA units and those swept up in the rioting. /9pic.twitter.com/nYuUA8hnGF

        3 replies 34 retweets 74 likes
        Show this thread
      10. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Synagogues in every German state were set on fire and reduced to rubble. Fire services only responded to ensure that non-German businesses weren’t threatened. Some of the greatest treasures of German Jews went up in flames as their place of worship were consumed. /10pic.twitter.com/rVms7R5RVo

        2 replies 35 retweets 72 likes
        Show this thread
      11. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        30,000 Jewish men, rounded up by the SA, SS and other groups, were taken to concentration camps within Germany, such as Sachsenhausen near Berlin. There they were subject to beatings and humiliation as they were processed by the guards. /11pic.twitter.com/nARFlJMQxk

        2 replies 32 retweets 67 likes
        Show this thread
      12. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Nobody has an exact, accurate figure as to how many died, but 91 is put forward as a figure. Some of these died due to beatings they received, others, like the Goldbergs of Bremen, were executed due to unclear orders being given by local Nazi authorities. /12pic.twitter.com/vzMzUCDcKw

        4 replies 22 retweets 67 likes
        Show this thread
      13. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Despite the violence, damage and carnage, international reaction was muted. 'Concerns' were expressed of course, but Germany’s position as the emergent power of Europe meant that western governments were loathe to antagonize the Nazi regime. /13https://abcnews.go.com/International/world-shrugged-off-kristallnacht/story?id=20826565 …

        10 replies 51 retweets 80 likes
        Show this thread
      14. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Following the blood and broken glass of ‘Kristallnacht’, conditions for German Jews became much worse, excluded from public spaces and other services. They were not required to wear the Star of David yet, but they lived in constant fear of violence and removal to a camp. /14

        2 replies 25 retweets 66 likes
        Show this thread
      15. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        It’s important to remember that this was encouraged and supervised by a legally-elected government that believed that it had popular support. ‘Kristallnacht’ was no sudden lawbreaking - the country was at the point where it was accepted by the international community. /15

        4 replies 62 retweets 137 likes
        Show this thread
      16. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        If you would like to know more about the events of November 9th, 1938, please follow accounts like @yadvashem, @AuschwitzMuseum, @ushmm and @holocaustuk, who will be sharing resources. This is also an excellent overview of events. /16 https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/background-and-overview-of-kristallnacht …

        3 replies 37 retweets 92 likes
        Show this thread
      17. Mike Stuchbery  💀 🍷‏Verified account @MikeStuchbery_ 6 Nov 2018

        Never Again. /FINpic.twitter.com/8dm1mVsut2

        14 replies 44 retweets 273 likes
        Show this thread
      18. End of conversation

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