Jerusalem, Israel - Nov. 9, 2016 - In commemoration of November 9, Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass and the shattered dreams and lives of Jewish population in Germany, the OU Israel Center in Jerusalem, Israel, hosted a special evening program.

Though she was a little girl Miriam Litke remembered her father's Berlin shop closing in 1933. "He had to travel afterwards to try and sell his goods," she said as she retold the story of her family. Her mother schleped her little girl from consulate to consulate looking for a way out of Berlin and Germany to a safe country, but to no avail. She did learn geography, added Miriam with a bit of humor added to a sad story.

Their apartment was next to the Berlin Beit Zion Shul, where the family could see the sifrei Torah thrown to the street, and the contents of the holy building destroyed. It was not burned down, as a chemical factory was located nearby, Miriam recounted to an attentive audience.

The next morning eleven year-old, blue-eyed Miriam with her blonde hair worn in pig-tails, was sent out to assess damage to an uncle's shop. She witnessed destruction all around. Mobs were painting large red "J"s on Jewish shops. One uncle who had been recognized as a Jew while checking on another shop, had his whole face painted with the red paint. Miriam recalled the family members working hard to remove the red stains from his face.

Miriam Litke and her brother were sent to England on two separate Kindertransport trains and reunited after the war.

As for the rest of the family:

It has been 78 years since Kristallnacht, those who were there will remember, but each year there are fewer. "There are no guarantees, but as long as we are around to tell it, we must." concludes Miriam Litke. 

Remember Kristallhacht, those who survived and those millions who perished.