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18 hours ago
By Phelan ChatterjeeBBC News
Eighty-four years ago, an outbreak of mass violence against Jews in Germany and Austria marked a major escalation of the Nazis’ persecution.
Thousands of Jewish businesses, homes and synagogues were attacked, and almost 100 Jews were killed during the violence. Some 30,000 Jewish men were sent to concentration camps.
Now, new photos have emerged of the November pogrom of 1938 – or Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass.
WARNING: This article contains distressing images
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Image caption,People watch as a Nazi official attacks a Jewish business
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Image caption,Objects litter the floor at a ransacked Jewish business
The pictures were taken by two Nazi photographers in the German city of Nuremberg and nearby town of Fürth.
Those photographers were an integral part of the event, according to Jonathan Matthews, head of the photo archive at Yad Vashem, the Israeli memorial centre which released the pictures.
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Image caption,Pews overturned at a synagogue
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Image caption,Officers pouring petrol onto pews at a synagogue

Image caption,The synagogue ablaze during the pogrom
The album was given to Yad Vashem by the family of a Jewish US soldier who served in Germany during World War Two.
According to the memorial centre, he never spoke about his experiences during the war.
When his granddaughter Elisheva Avital opened the album, she felt as if a «hole had been burned through [her] hands».
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The pogroms on 9 and 10 November 1938 are often regarded as the starting point of the Holocaust, in which Nazi Germany killed six million Jews.
Mr Matthews said the pictures show the violence was organised by the state – and was not a «spontaneous event of an enraged public», as the official narrative at the time suggested.
Fuente: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-63587638