
The Kolo: Women's Cross-Cultural Collaboration
912173756
Olympia, WA 98516 USA
kolocollaboration.org
kolocollaboration
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News

#koloinformedtrauma (fb)

I am a child of the Holocaust—of World War II and of the greater, unspoken Holocaust of the Middle Ages, when for over 300 years, women were burned, drowned, and tortured. Their names erased, their knowledge criminalized, their bodies marked as witch. This is not history. It is inheritance. When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor on January 30, 1933, it was not with guns, but with torchlight parades—a willing descent into darkness. The seduction of order, wrapped in nationalist pride, offered cover for an ancient hatred to modernize itself. Hussein Hallak’s account reminds us: genocide does not begin with killing. It begins with legal declarations. With flags. With propaganda. With scapegoating wrapped in law and spectacle. The Reichstag fire, the Enabling Act—tools not of collapse, but of calculated transformation. Germany did not fall. It voted itself away. And behind the rise of the swastika was the deeper betrayal: the silence of neighbors, the cheering crowds, the normalization of violence through bureaucracy and spectacle. My mother survived Jasenovac, one of the most brutal concentration camps—operated not by Nazis, but by neighbors. I know in my bones how democracy can be weaponized against the most vulnerable. How women’s bodies have long been the testing ground for political terror. The warning signs are not abstract. They are patterned. Predictable. Familiar. The chilling truth is that it doesn’t take mass weapons. It takes mass indifference. Do not say “never again” and still remain silent. Dr. Danica Anderson Hussein Hallak When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor on January 30, 1933, torchlight parades marked Germany’s willing descent into darkness. Hitler, a decorated WWI veteran, embodied post-war resentment. The "stab-in-the-back" myth—that Germany had been betrayed internally—found its evangelist. Struggling in Vienna as a failed artist, he absorbed the city's virulent antisemitism. Later, amid Germany’s devastation, he weaponized it. In 1923, his coup d'état failed, but his trial became a platform. Prison allowed him to write Mein Kampf. Germany’s democracy crumbled after the 1929 economic collapse. Millions, desperate amid soaring unemployment, embraced political extremes. The Nazi message—nationalism, antisemitism, renewal—thrived. By July 1932, Nazis dominated parliament, though without majority. Hitler wasn’t elected Chancellor; conservative elites appointed him, believing they could control him. "We've hired him," Franz von Papen said confidently. Soon after, the Reichstag fire and Enabling Act destroyed democratic protections. Democracy voted itself away. The takeover was swift. Opposition was imprisoned in concentration camps like Dachau. Trade unions dissolved; rival parties banned. The 1934 Night of the Long Knives eliminated threats. When President Hindenburg died, Hitler combined presidency and chancellorship into absolute dictatorship. Initially, ordinary Germans benefited. Jobs appeared through massive public projects like autobahns. The 1936 Olympics displayed prosperity, masking economic recovery built on rearmament and plunder—buying crucial public support. Behind the facade, Jews faced systematic persecution. The 1935 Nuremberg Laws revoked citizenship and rights. By 1938, Kristallnacht revealed legal discrimination had become state violence, met by widespread complicity or indifference. Hitler's foreign policy followed his earlier blueprint: violating Versailles Treaty through rearmament, annexations, and invasions. Western democracies, haunted by WWI, appeased rather than confronted until too late. Germany's 1939 invasion of Poland finally provoked war. Nazi conquest spread across Europe, bringing horrors—especially the Holocaust, murdering six million Jews and millions more deemed "undesirable." Hitler’s strategic miscalculations—invading the USSR, declaring war on the U.S.—ensured defeat. As Allies closed in on Berlin, Hitler committed suicide in April 1945, leaving Europe in ruins. The chilling lesson isn’t about one evil man, but democracy’s fragility when economic crisis, nationalism, and division collide. It shows how existing prejudices are normalized through propaganda, and how ordinary people become complicit in atrocities when moral boundaries erode gradually. Hitler’s Germany warns civilizational collapse doesn't always come violently. Sometimes it emerges democratically, through patriotic ceremonies and laws passed openly, each step making the next seem less unthinkable until the unthinkable becomes routine. #KoloInformedTrauma #KIT #drdanicaanderson #IntergenerationalTrauma #HolocaustMemory #FeministHistory #CivilizationInCrisis #TraumaIsInstruction #NeverAgainIsNow (fb)

Poslední diskuze
Nearby
4.5
Olympia
About the organization
- 214, F60, R24, R30 -
From War Crimes and War Survivors to Thriving SelfSustaining Trauma Trainings Embodying Healing Healing begins when humanity ends The Kolo Womens CrossCultural Collaboration Trauma is intensified learning Shoulder to Shoulder Collaborations No More Stolen Sisters. Dallas TX May 2019 MMIW 20 Years International Fieldwork Experience in Kolo Self Trauma Care Response The Kolo WCCC Trauma Trainings Heal The Kolo Self Trauma Care Protocol is a epigenetic methodology informed intensified and inspired by twenty years of international trauma response and healing with womens trauma survivors of domestic violence conflict crisis war genocide disaster. Trainings Trainings Intensified Learning traumainformed and responsive training programs and modules with handson workshops and trainthetrainer programs available inhouse onsite and via online courses customizable for every need including to Collaborative Collectives Collaborative Collectives Intensified Learning and collaboration with the Kolo Self Trauma Care Protocol is an inclusive social engagement application in Collaborative Collectives. True advocacy and activism heals the individual and especially the social collective of trauma and stems the intergenerational cycle of violence.
Counseling Support Groups Women's Rights Intergroup/Race Relations