Outside of Vienna the situation was similar though perhaps not quite as bad; in Graz and Linz this may have been because all Jewish shops had already been Aryanized and therefore could not be plundered. There was looting, however, in Salzburg and Klagenfurt. The main difference between Vienna and the provinces is that the SA was in charge of burning synagogues in the federal states, not the SS. There also appears to have been less violence perpetrated against Jews except in Innsbruck, perhaps indicating a closer sense of smalltown solidarity between Jews and gentiles than existed in a more impersonal metropolis like Vienna. In Graz, most of the young SS men were actually on friendly terms with their former Jewish classmates.
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Many historians believe that the November Pogrom was even more severe in Austria than in the Altreich. The only evidence to support this contention, however, is anecdotal. There are no statistics to compare property damage in Austria with that in the Altreich. The number of Jews arrested in Vienna6,547 out of somewhere between 20,000 and 40,000 for the entire Reichwas no more than proportionate to Vienna's share of the Third Reich's Jewish population in November 1938. Equally proportionate was the twenty-seven murders in Vienna compared with ninety-one for the whole Reich. Individual acts of cruelty toward Jews may have been more common in Vienna than elsewhere, but this has not been proved statistically. There were many private individuals who condemned the senseless destruction of property in Germany, but such expressions were not unknown in Austria either, even among party members. Two things are reasonably certain, however. Kristallnacht was at least as brutal in Austria as elsewhere in the Third Reich; and 10 and 11 November proved that the robbery and murder of defenseless Jews would not cause a collective protest. The Nazi government therefore had little to fear from the Austrians when it decided to accelerate the process of destroying what remained of the Jewish community. 30
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The Solution to Vienna's Housing Problem
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The confiscation of Jewish homes and other kinds of wealth by Austrian Nazis both before and after Kristallnacht probably had less to do with Nazi ideology than it did with economic self-aggrandizement-that is, pure old-fashioned greed. In addition, Hitler, Bürckel, and the Austrian Nazis intended to solve the housing shortage in Vienna by driving out the Jews, as well as Czechs and other foreigners. It was a solution to a problem that had been chronic in
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