Unit 1012 will honor and always remember German Industrialist, Oskar
Schindler every year on his birthday April 28 and on October 9, as he passed
away at the age of 66 on that date in 1974. He is buried in Jerusalem
on Mount
Zion, the only member of the Nazi Party to be honoured in this way. We will remember and honor him for saving the lives of more than 1000
Jews during World War II and he rightfully deserves to be recognized by the
State of Israel as Righteous among the Nations. His story should be
an inspiration for us to support victims’ rights and defend the use of the
death penalty.
We will post information about him from Wikipedia and other links.
Oskar Schindler as photographed in Argentina after World War II |
Born
|
28
April 1908
Zwittau, Moravia, Austria-Hungary (now Svitavy, Czech Republic) |
Died
|
9
October 1974 (aged 66)
Hildesheim, West Germany |
Resting place
|
Mount
Zion
Catholic Cemetery
Jerusalem, Israel 31.770164°N 35.230423°E |
Occupation
|
Industrialist
|
Political party
|
|
Religion
|
Catholic
|
Spouse(s)
|
Emilie
Schindler (m. 1928)
|
Parents
|
|
Website
|
|
Oskar Schindler (28 April 1908 – 9 October
1974) was an ethnic German industrialist, German spy, and member of the Nazi
party who is credited with saving the lives of 1,200 Jews during the
Holocaust by employing them in his enamelware and ammunitions factories,
which were located in what is now Poland and the Czech Republic respectively.
He is the subject of the 1982 novel Schindler's
Ark, and the subsequent 1993 film Schindler's
List, which reflected his life as an opportunist initially motivated by
profit who came to show extraordinary initiative, tenacity, and dedication in
order to save the lives of his Jewish employees.
Schindler grew up in Zwittau, Moravia,
and worked in several trades until he joined the Abwehr, the intelligence
service of Nazi Germany, in 1936. He joined the Nazi Party in 1939. Prior to
the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938, he collected information on
railways and troop movements for the German government. He was arrested for
espionage by the Czech government but was released under the terms of the
Munich Agreement in 1938. Schindler continued to collect information for the
Nazis, working in Poland in 1939 before the invasion of Poland at the start of
World War II.
In 1939 Schindler obtained an
enamelware factory in Kraków, Poland, which employed around 1,750 workers, of
whom a thousand were Jews at the factory's peak in 1944. His Abwehr connections
helped Schindler to protect his Jewish workers from deportation and death in
the Nazi concentration camps. Initially Schindler was interested in the
money-making potential of the business. Later he began shielding his workers
without regard for the cost. As time went on, Schindler had to give Nazi
officials ever larger bribes and gifts of luxury items obtainable only on the
black market to keep his workers safe.
As Germany began losing the war in
July 1944, the Schutzstaffel (SS) began closing down the easternmost
concentration camps and evacuating the remaining prisoners westward. Many were
killed in Auschwitz and Gross-Rosen concentration camp. Schindler convinced SS-Hauptsturmführer
Amon Göth, commandant of the nearby Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp, to allow
him to move his factory to Brünnlitz in the Sudetenland, thus sparing his workers from
certain death in the gas chambers. Using names provided by Jewish Ghetto Police
officer Marcel Goldberg, Göth's secretary Mietek Pemper compiled and typed the
list of 1,200 Jews who travelled to Brünnlitz in October 1944. Schindler
continued to bribe SS officials to prevent the slaughter of his workers until
the end of World War II in Europe in May 1945, by which time he had spent his
entire fortune on bribes and black-market purchases of supplies for his
workers.
Schindler moved to Germany after the
war, where he was supported by assistance payments from Jewish relief
organisations. After receiving a partial reimbursement for his wartime
expenses, he moved with his wife to Argentina, where they took up farming. When
he went bankrupt in 1958, Schindler left his wife and returned to Germany,
where he failed at several business ventures and relied on financial support
from Schindlerjuden ("Schindler Jews") – the
people whose lives he had saved during the war. He was named Righteous Among
the Nations by the Israeli government in 1963 and died on 9 October 1974.
Early life
and career
Schindler was born on 28 April 1908
into a Sudeten German family in Zwittau, Moravia, Austria-Hungary. His father
was Johann "Hans" Schindler, the owner of a farm machinery business,
and his mother was Franziska "Fanny" Schindler (née Luser). His
sister, Elfriede, was born in 1915. After attending primary and secondary
school, Schindler enrolled in a technical school, from which he was expelled in
1924 for forging his report card. He later graduated, but did not take the
Abitur exams that would have enabled him to go to college or university.
Instead he took courses in Brno in several trades, including chauffeuring and
machinery, and worked for his father for three years. A fan of motorcycles
since his youth, Schindler bought a 250-cc Moto Guzzi racing motorcycle and
competed recreationally in mountain races for the next few years.
On 6 March 1928, Schindler married
Emilie Pelzl (1907–2001), daughter of a prosperous Sudeten German farmer from
Maletein. The young couple moved in with Oskar's parents and occupied the
upstairs rooms, where they lived for the next seven years. Soon after his
marriage, Schindler quit working for his father and took a series of jobs,
including a position at Moravian Electrotechnic and the management of a driving
school. After an 18-month stint in the Czech army, where he rose to the rank of
Lance-Corporal in the Tenth Infantry Regiment of the 31st Army, Schindler
returned to Moravian Electrotechnic, which went bankrupt shortly afterwards.
His father's farm machinery business closed around the same time, leaving
Schindler unemployed for a year. He took a job with Jarslav Simek Bank of
Prague in 1931, where he worked until 1938.
Schindler was arrested several times
in 1931 and 1932 for public drunkenness. Also around this time he had an affair
with Aurelie Schlegel, a school friend. She bore him a daughter, Emily, in
1933, and a son, Oskar Jr, in 1935. Schindler later claimed the boy was not his
son. Schindler's father, an alcoholic, abandoned his wife in 1935. She died a
few months later after a lengthy illness.
Schindler joined the separatist
Sudeten German Party in 1935. Although he was a citizen of Czechoslovakia,
Schindler became a spy for the Abwehr, the intelligence service of Nazi
Germany, in 1936. He was assigned to Abwehrstelle II Commando VIII, based in
Breslau. He later told Czech police that he did it because he needed the money;
by this time Schindler had a drinking problem and was chronically in debt. His
tasks for the Abwehr included collecting information on railways, military
installations, and troop movements, as well as recruiting other spies within
Czechoslovakia, in advance of a planned invasion of the country by Nazi
Germany. He was arrested by the Czech government for espionage on 18 July 1938
and immediately imprisoned, but was released as a political prisoner under the
terms of the Munich Agreement, the instrument under which the Czech Sudetenland
was annexed into Germany on 1 October. Schindler applied for membership in the
Nazi Party on 1 November and was accepted the following year.
After some time off to recover in
Zwittau, Schindler was promoted to second in command of his Abwehr unit and
relocated with his wife to Ostrava, on the Czech-Polish border, in January
1939. He was involved in espionage in the months leading up to Hitler's seizure
of the remainder of Czechoslovakia in March. Emilie helped him with paperwork,
processing and hiding secret documents in their apartment for the Abwehr
office. As he frequently travelled to Poland on business, he and his 25 agents
were in a position to collect information about Polish military activities and
railways for the planned invasion of Poland. One assignment called for his unit
to monitor and provide information about the railway line and tunnel in the
Jablunkov Pass, deemed critical for the movement of German troops. Schindler
continued to work for Abwehr until as late as fall 1940, when he was sent to
Turkey to investigate corruption among the Abwehr officers assigned to the
German embassy there.
World War
II
Emalia
Schindler first arrived in Kraków in
October 1939 on Abwehr business and took an apartment the following month.
Emilie maintained the apartment in Ostrava and visited Oskar in Kraków at least
once a week. In November 1939, he contacted interior decorator Mila Pfefferberg
to decorate his new apartment. Her son, Leopold "Poldek" Pfefferberg,
soon became one of his contacts for black market trading. They eventually
became lifelong friends. Also that November, Schindler was introduced to Itzhak
Stern, an accountant for Schindler's fellow Abwehr agent Josef "Sepp"
Aue, who had taken over Stern's formerly Jewish-owned place of employment as a Treuhander
(trustee). Property belonging to Polish Jews, including their possessions,
places of business, and homes were seized by the Germans beginning immediately
after the invasion, and Jewish citizens were stripped of their civil rights.
Schindler showed Stern the balance sheet of a company he was thinking of
acquiring, an enamelware factory called Rekord Ltd owned by a consortium of
Jewish businessmen that had filed for bankruptcy earlier that year. Stern
advised him that rather than running the company as a trusteeship under the auspices
of the Haupttreuhandstelle Ost (Main Trustee Office for the East), he
should buy or lease the business, as that would give him more freedom from the
dictates of the Nazis, including the freedom to hire more Jews. With the
financial backing of several Jewish investors, Schindler signed an informal
lease agreement on the factory on 13 November 1939 and formalised the
arrangement on 15 January 1940. He renamed it Deutsche Emaillewaren-Fabrik
(German Enamelware Factory) or DEF, and it soon became known by the nickname
"Emalia". He initially acquired a staff of seven Jewish workers
(including Abraham Bankier, who helped him manage the company) and 250
non-Jewish Poles. At its peak in 1944, the business employed around 1,750
workers, a thousand of whom were Jews. Schindler also helped run Schlomo Wiener
Ltd, a wholesale outfit that sold his enamelware, and was leaseholder of
Prokosziner Glashütte, a glass factory.
Schindler's ties with the Abwehr and
his connections in the Wehrmacht and its Armaments Inspectorate enabled him to
obtain contracts to produce enamel cookware for the military. These connections
also later helped him protect his Jewish workers from deportation and death. As
time went on, Schindler had to give Nazi officials ever larger bribes and gifts
of luxury items obtainable only on the black market to keep his workers safe.
Bankier, a key black market connection, obtained goods for bribes as well as
extra materials for use in the factory. Schindler himself enjoyed a lavish
lifestyle and pursued extramarital relationships with his secretary, Viktoria
Klonowska, and Eva Kisch Scheuer, a merchant specialising in enamelware from
DEF. Emilie Schindler visited for a few months in 1940 and moved to Kraków to
live with Oskar in 1941.
Initially, Schindler was mostly
interested in the money-making potential of the business and hired Jews because
they were cheaper than Poles – the wages were set by the occupying Nazi regime.
Later he began shielding his workers without regard for cost. The status of his
factory as a business essential to the war effort became a decisive factor
enabling him to help his Jewish workers. Whenever Schindlerjuden
(Schindler Jews) were threatened with deportation, he claimed exemptions for
them. Wives, children, and even persons with disabilities were claimed to be
necessary mechanics and metalworkers. On one occasion, the Gestapo came to
Schindler demanding that he hand over a family with forged identity papers.
"Three hours after they walked in," Schindler said, "two drunk
Gestapo men reeled out of my office without their prisoners and without the
incriminating documents they had demanded."
On 1 August 1940 Governor Hans Frank
issued a decree requiring all Kraków Jews to leave the city within the next two
weeks. Only those who had jobs directly related to the German war effort would
be allowed to stay. Of the 60,000 to 80,000 Jews then living in the city, only
15,000 remained by March 1941. These Jews were then forced to leave their
traditional neighbourhood of Kazimierz and relocate to the walled Kraków
Ghetto, established in the industrial Podgórze district. Schindler's workers
travelled on foot to and from the ghetto each day to their jobs at the factory.
Enlargements to the facility in the four years Schindler was in charge included
the addition of an outpatient clinic, co-op, kitchen, and dining room for the
workers, in addition to expansion of the factory and its related office space.
Oskar Schindler's enamel factory in Kraków.
|
Płaszów
In fall
1941 the Nazis began transporting Jews out of the ghetto. Most of these were
sent to Belzec extermination camp and killed. On 13 March 1943 the
ghetto was liquidated and those still fit for work were sent to the new concentration
camp at Płaszów. Several thousand not deemed fit for work were sent
to extermination camps and killed. Hundreds more were killed on the streets by
the Nazis as they cleared out the ghetto. Schindler, aware of the planned
action because of his Wehrmacht contacts, had his workers stay at the factory
overnight to prevent them coming to any harm. Schindler witnessed the
liquidation of the ghetto and was appalled. From that point forward, says Schindlerjude
Sol Urbach, Schindler "changed his mind about the Nazis. He decided to get
out and to save as many Jews as he could."
Płaszów
concentration camp opened in March 1943 on the former site of two Jewish
cemeteries on Jerozilimska Street, about 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) from the
DEF factory. In charge of the camp was SS-Hauptsturmführer
Amon Göth, a brutal sadist who would shoot inmates of the camp at
random. Inmates at Płaszów lived in constant daily fear for their lives. Emilie
Schindler called Göth "the most despicable man I have ever met."
Initially
Göth's plan was that all the factories, including Schindler's, should be moved
inside the camp gates. However, Schindler, with a combination of diplomacy,
flattery, and bribery, not only prevented his factory from being moved, but
convinced Göth to allow him to build (at his own expense) a subcamp at Emalia
to house his workers plus 450 Jews from other nearby factories. There they were
safe from the threat of random execution, were well fed and housed, and were
even permitted to undertake religious observances.
Schindler
was arrested twice on suspicion of black market activities and once for
breaking the Nuremberg Laws by kissing a
Jewish girl, an action forbidden by the Race and Resettlement Act. The first
arrest, in late 1941, led to him being kept overnight. His secretary arranged
for his release through Schindler's influential contacts in the Nazi party. His
second arrest, on 29 April 1942, was the result of his kissing a Jewish girl on
the cheek at his birthday party at the factory the previous day. He remained in
jail five days before his influential Nazi contacts were able to obtain his
release. The third arrest, where he was accused of black marketeering and
bribing Göth and others to improve the conditions of the Jewish workers, took
place in October 1944. He was held for most of a week and released. Göth had
been arrested on 13 September 1944 for corruption and other abuses of power,
and Schindler's arrest was part of the ongoing investigation into Göth's
activities. Göth was never convicted on those charges, but was hanged for war
crimes on 13 September 1946.
In 1943
Schindler was contacted via members of the Jewish resistance movement by
Zionist leaders in Budapest. Schindler travelled there several times to report
in person on Nazi mistreatment of the Jews. He brought back funding provided by
the Jewish Agency for Israel and turned
it over to the Jewish underground.
Chujowa Górka ("Prick Hill"), the
execution place in Płaszów concentration camp.
|
Oskar Schindler's
factory at Brněnec
(15 km south of Svitavy), Czech Republic as seen in summer 2004
|
Brünnlitz
As the Red Army drew nearer in July
1944, the SS began closing down the easternmost concentration camps and
evacuating the remaining prisoners westward to Auschwitz and Gross-Rosen
concentration camp. Göth's personal secretary, Mietek Pemper, alerted Schindler
to the Nazis' plans to close all factories not directly involved in the war
effort, including Schindler's enamelware facility. Pemper suggested to
Schindler that production should be switched from cookware to anti-tank
grenades in an effort to save the lives of the Jewish workers. Using bribery
and his powers of persuasion, Schindler convinced Göth and the officials in
Berlin to allow him to move his factory and his workers to Brünnlitz (Czech: Brněnec),
in the Sudetenland, thus sparing them from certain death in the gas chambers.
Using names provided by Jewish Ghetto Police officer Marcel Goldberg,
Pemper compiled and typed the list of 1,200 Jews—1,000 of Schindler's workers
and 200 inmates from Julius Madritsch's textiles factory—who were sent
to Brünnlitz in October 1944.
On 15 October 1944 a train carrying
700 men on Schindler's list was initially sent to the concentration camp at
Gross-Rosen, where the men spent about a week before being re-routed to the
factory in Brünnlitz. Three hundred female Schindlerjuden were similarly
sent to Auschwitz, where they were in imminent danger of being sent to the gas
chambers. Schindler's usual connections and bribes failed to obtain their
release. Finally after he sent his secretary, Hilde Albrecht, with bribes of
black market goods, food and diamonds, the women were sent to Brünnlitz after
several harrowing weeks in Auschwitz.
In addition to workers, Schindler
moved 250 wagon loads of machinery and raw materials to the location of the new
factory. Few if any useful artillery shells were produced at the plant. When
officials from the Armaments Ministry questioned factory's low output,
Schindler bought finished goods on the black market and resold them as his own.
The rations provided by the SS were insufficient to meet the needs of the
workers, so Schindler spent most of his time in Kraków, obtaining food,
armaments, and other materials. His wife Emilie remained in Brünnlitz,
surreptitiously obtaining additional rations and caring for the workers' health
and other basic needs. Schindler also arranged for the transfer of as many as
3,000 Jewish women out of Auschwitz to small textiles plants in the Sudetenland
in an effort to increase their chances of surviving the war.
In January 1945 a trainload of 250
Jews who had been rejected as workers at a mine in Goleschau in Poland arrived
at Brünnlitz. The boxcars were frozen shut when they arrived, and Emilie
Schindler waited while an engineer from the factory opened the cars using a
soldering iron. Twelve people were dead in the cars, and the remainder were too
ill and feeble to work. Emilie took the survivors into the factory and cared
for them in a makeshift hospital until the end of the war. Schindler continued
to bribe SS officials to prevent the slaughter of his workers as the Red Army
approached. On 7 May 1945 he and his workers gathered on the factory floor to
listen to British Prime Minister Winston Churchill announce on the radio
Germany's surrender.
After the
war
As a member of the Nazi party and the
Abwehr intelligence service, Schindler was in danger of being arrested as a war
criminal. Bankier, Stern, and several others prepared a statement he could
present to the Americans attesting to his role saving Jewish lives. He was also
given a ring, made using gold from dental work taken out of the mouth of Schindlerjude
Simon Jeret. The ring was inscribed "Whoever saves one life saves the
world entire." To escape being captured by the Russians, Schindler and his
wife departed westward in their vehicle, a two-seater Horch, initially with
several fleeing German soldiers riding on the running boards. A truck
containing Schindler's mistress Marta, several Jewish workers, and a load of
black market trade goods followed behind. The Horch was confiscated by Russian
troops at the town of Budweis, which had already been captured by Russian troops.
The Schindlers were unable to recover a diamond that Oskar had hidden under the
seat. They continued by train and on foot until they reached the American lines
at the town of Lenora, and then travelled to Passau, where an American Jewish
officer arranged for them to travel to Switzerland by train. They moved to
Bavaria in Germany in the fall of 1945.
By the end of the war, Schindler had
spent his entire fortune on bribes and black-market purchases of supplies for
his workers. Virtually destitute, he moved briefly to Regensburg and later
Munich, but did not prosper in postwar Germany. In fact, he was reduced to
receiving assistance from Jewish organizations. In 1948 he presented a claim
for reimbursement of his wartime expenses to the American Jewish Joint
Distribution Committee, and received $15,000. He estimated his expenditures at
over $1,056,000, including the costs of camp construction, bribes, and
expenditures for black market goods, including food. Schindler emigrated to
Argentina in 1949, where he tried raising chickens and then nutria, a small
animal raised for its fur. When the business went bankrupt in 1958, he left his
wife and returned to Germany, where he had a series of unsuccessful business
ventures, including a cement factory. He declared bankruptcy in 1963 and
suffered a heart attack the next year, which led to a month-long stay in
hospital. Remaining in contact with many of the Jews he had met during the war,
including Stern and Pfefferberg, Schindler survived on donations sent by Schindlerjuden
all over the world. He died on 9 October 1974 and is buried in Jerusalem on
Mount Zion, the only member of the Nazi Party to be honoured in this way. For
his work during the war, in 1963 Schindler was named Righteous Among the
Nations, an award bestowed by the State of Israel on non-Jews who took an
active role to rescue Jews during the Holocaust. Other awards include the
German Order of Merit (1966).
Writer Herbert Steinhouse, who
interviewed him in 1948, wrote that "Schindler's exceptional deeds stemmed
from just that elementary sense of decency and humanity that our sophisticated
age seldom sincerely believes in. A repentant opportunist saw the light and
rebelled against the sadism and vile criminality all around him." In a
1983 television documentary, Schindler was quoted as saying, "I felt that
the Jews were being destroyed. I had to help them; there was no choice."
Oskar Schindler’s desk and the tinware
sarcophagus with the famous list inside at Schindler’s Emalia Factory in
Kraków.
|
Oskar Schindler’s desk and the tinware
sarcophagus with the famous list inside at Schindler’s Emalia Factory in
Kraków.
|
Legacy
Films and
book
In 1951, Poldek Pfefferberg approached
director Fritz Lang and asked him to consider making a film about Schindler.
Also on Pfefferberg's initiative, in 1964 Schindler received a $20,000 advance
from MGM for a proposed film treatment titled To the Last Hour. Neither
film was ever made, and Schindler quickly spent the money he received from MGM.
He was also approached in the 1960s by MCA of Germany and Walt Disney
Productions in Vienna, but again nothing came of these projects.
In 1980, Australian author Thomas
Keneally by chance visited Pfefferberg's luggage store in Beverly Hills while
en route home from a film festival in Europe. Pfefferberg took the opportunity
to tell Keneally the story of Oskar Schindler. He gave him copies of some
materials he had on file, and Keneally soon decided to make a fictionalised
treatment of the story. After extensive research and interviews with surviving Schindlerjuden,
his 1982 historical novel Schindler's Ark (published in the United
States as Schindler's List) was the result.
The novel was adapted into the 1993
movie Schindler's List by Steven Spielberg. After acquiring the rights
in 1983, Spielberg felt he was not ready emotionally or professionally to
tackle the project, and he offered the rights to several other directors. After
he read a script for the project prepared by Steven
Zaillian for Martin Scorsese, he decided to trade him Cape Fear for the opportunity to do the
Schindler biography. In the film, the character of Itzhak Stern (played by Ben
Kingsley) is a composite of Stern, Bankier, and Pemper. Liam Neeson
was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of
Schindler in the film, which won seven Oscars, including
Best Picture.
Other film treatments include a 1983
British television documentary produced by Jon Blair
for Thames Television entitled Schindler: His
Story as Told by the Actual People He Saved (released in the US in 1994 as Schindler:
The Real Story), and a 1998 A&E
Biography special, Oskar Schindler: The Man Behind the List.
Oskar Schindler |
Schindler's
suitcase
In 1997 a suitcase belonging to
Schindler containing historic photographs and documents was discovered in the
attic of the apartment of Ami and Heinrich Staehr in Hildesheim. Schindler had
stayed with the couple for a few days shortly before his death. Staehr's son
Chris took the suitcase to Stuttgart, where the documents were examined in
detail in 1999 by Dr. Wolfgang Borgmann, science editor of the Stuttgarter
Zeitung. Borgmann wrote a series of seven articles, which appeared in the
paper from 16 to 26 October 1999 and were eventually published in book form as Schindlers
Koffer: Berichte aus dem Leben eines Lebensretters ; eine Dokumentation
der Stuttgarter Zeitung (Schindler's Suitcase: Report on the Life of a
Rescuer). The documents and suitcase were sent to the Holocaust museum at
Yad Vashem in Israel for safekeeping in December 1999.
Schindler's museum krakow. Righteous among
the nation 63
|
Copies of the
list
In early April 2009, a carbon copy of
one version of the list was discovered at the State Library of New South Wales
by workers combing through boxes of materials collected by author Thomas
Keneally. The 13-page document, yellow and fragile, was filed among research
notes and original newspaper clippings. The document was given to Keneally in
1980 by Pfefferberg when he was persuading him to write Schindler's story. This
version of the list contains 801 names and is dated 18 April 1945; Pfefferberg
is listed as worker number 173. Several authentic versions of the list exist,
as the names were re-typed several times as conditions changed in the hectic
days at the end of the war.
One of four existing copies of the
list was offered at a ten-day auction starting on 19 July 2013 on EBay at a
reserve price of $3 million. It received no bids.
Other
memorabilia
In August 2013, a one-page letter
signed by Schindler on 22 August 1944 sold in an online auction for $59,135.
The letter noted Schindler's permission for a factory supervisor to move
machinery to Czechoslovakia. The same unknown auction buyer had previously purchased
1943 construction documents for Schindler's Kraków factory for $63,426.
Oskar Schindler's Villa, 9 Romanowicza
street, Zablocie, Krakow, Poland
|
Frankfurt am Main: Gedenktafel für Oskar
Schindler; an seinem Wohnhaus in der Nähe des Hauptbahnhofs
|
INTERNET SOURCE: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Oskar_Schindler
Oskar Schindler (28 April 1908 – 9 October
1974) was a Sudeten German industrialist credited with saving almost 1,200 Jews
during the Holocaust, by having them work in his enamelware and ammunitions
factories located in Poland and what is now the Czech Republic.
Oskar
Schindler against the Nazis
[PHOTO
SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/265164]
|
Quotes
- The persecution of Jews in occupied Poland meant that we could see horror emerging gradually in many ways. In 1939, they were forced to wear Jewish stars, and people were herded and shut up into ghettos. Then, in the years '41 and '42 there was plenty of public evidence of pure sadism. With people behaving like pigs, I felt the Jews were being destroyed. I had to help them. There was no choice.
- Interview at Am Hauptbahn No. 4 in Frankfurt Am Main, West Germany (1964), quoted in The Oscar Schindler Story (2012)
- I knew the people who worked for me. When you know people, you have to behave towards them like human beings.
- Response in 1965, to Moshe Bejski, one of the Schindlerjuden, who later a became a justice on the Supreme Court of Israel and president of the Commission to honor the Righteous Among the Nations, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow.
- I hated the brutality, the sadism, and the insanity of Nazism. I just couldn't stand by and see people destroyed. I did what I could, what I had to do, what my conscience told me I must do. That's all there is to it. Really, nothing more.
- On his metamorphosis from a Nazi party member to a savior of Jews in witnessing the genocidal practices of the "Final Solution", as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
- What is there to say? They are my friends. I would do it again, over and over — for I hate cruelty and intolerance.
- Remark in 1972, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
- Beyond this day, no thinking person could fail to see what would happen. I was now resolved to do everything in my power to defeat the system.
- After witnessing a day of Nazi roundups of Jews in Krakow, as quoted in Schindler's List (1982) by Thomas Keneally, Ch. 15
- There was no choice. If you saw a dog going to be crushed under a car, wouldn't you help him?
- To Poldek Pfefferberg, in response to the question of why he risked so much, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
- Now you are finally with me, you are safe now. Don't be afraid of anything. You don't have to worry anymore.
- Greeting 300 of his women workers he had saved from Auschwitz, on their return to his factory, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
Oskar
Schindler on helping the needy
[PHOTO
SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/164336]
|
Source/Notes:
Oskar Schindlers answer after Poldek Pfefferberg, another Schindlerjew asked him why he risked so much
[PHOTO
SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/265165]
|
Quotes about Schindler
Sorted alphabetically by author
- We gave up many times, but he always lifted our spirits ... Schindler tried to help people however he could. That is what we remember.
- Helen Beck, a Schindler Jew, as quoted in Schindlers Legacy : A Man of Courage — Schindler's list of life (2010)
- Oskar Schindler not only saved the lives of 1200 Jews — he saved our faith in humanity …
- Louis Bülow, in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010)
- He was a gambler, who loved living on the edge. He loved outsmarting the SS. I would not be alive today if it wasn't for Oscar Schindler. To us he was our God, our Father, our protector.
- Rena Ferber, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
- I don't know what his motives were, even though I knew him very well. I asked him and I never got a clear answer and the film doesn't make it clear, either. But I don't give a damn. What's important is that he saved our lives.
- Ludwik Feigenbaum, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
- If he was a virtuous, honest guy, no one in a corrupt, greedy system like the SS would accept him. … In a weird world that celebrated death, he recognized the Jews as humans. Schindler used corrupt ways, creativity and ingenuity against the monster machine dedicated to death.
- Zev Kedem, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
- What I’ll say is nothing poetic, but I will
repeat till the end of my days that the first time I was given life by my
parents and the second time by Oskar Schindler.
In ‘44 there were around 700 women transported from PÅ‚aszów, 300 of whom were on his list, and he fought for us like a lion, because they didn’t want to let us out of Auschwitz. He was offered better and healthier "material" from new transports, unlike us, who had spent several years in the camp. But he got us out .. he saved us. - Stella Müller-Madej, author of A Girl From Schindler's List (1991), as quoted in "KZ camp Plaszow and Schindler Jews"
- He came to my house once, and I put a bottle of cognac in front of him, and he finished it in one sitting. When his eyes were flickering — he wasn't drunk — I said this is the time to ask him the question "why"? His answer was "I was a Nazi, and I believed that the Germans were doing wrong ... when they started killing innocent people — and it didn't mean anything to me that they were Jewish, to me they were just human beings, menschen — I decided I am going to work against them and I am going to save as many as I can." And I think that Oscar told the truth, because that's the way he worked.
- Murray Pantirer, as quoted at "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow
- Oskar Schindler was a modern Noah … he saved individuals, husbands and wives and their children, families. It was like the saying: To save one life is to save the whole world. … In 1944, he was a very wealthy man, a multimillionaire. He could have taken the money and gone to Switzerland ... But instead, he gambled his life and all of his money to save us.
- Poldek Pfefferberg, a survivor, in Schindlers Legacy : A Man of Courage — Schindler's list of life (2010) by Louis Bülow]
- In spite of his flaws, Oscar had a big heart and was always ready to help whoever was in need. He was affable, kind, extremely generous and charitable, but at the same time, not mature at all. He constantly lied and deceived me, and later returned feeling sorry, like a boy caught in mischief, asking to be forgiven one more time — and then we would start all over again.
- Emilie Schindler, his wife, in Where Light and Shadow Meet : A Memoir (1997), as quoted in "Emilie Schindler" at Jewish Virtual Library
- There were SS guards but he would say "Good morning" to you. He was a chain smoker and he'd throw the cigarette on the floor after only two puffs, because he knew the workers would pick it up after him. To me he was an angel. Because of him I was treated like a human being. And because of him I survived. … What people don't understand about Oscar is the power of the man, his strength, his determination. Everything he did he did to save the Jews. Can you imagine what power it took for him to pull out from Auschwitz 300 people? At Auschwitz, there was only one way you got out, we used to say. Through the chimney! Understand? Nobody ever got out of Auschwitz. But Schindler got out 300 ….!
- Abraham Zuckerman, as quoted at Schindlers Legacy : A Man of Courage — Schindler's list of life (2010) by Louis Bülow] -->
- We do not forget the sorrows of Egypt, we do not forget Haman, we do not forget Hitler. Thus, among the unjust, we do not forget the just. Remember Oskar Schindler.
- Preamble to an appeal launched by the Schindlerjuden in 1961 on Schindler's behalf. Cited in Thomas Keneally Schindler's Ark (London: Coronet, 1983), p. 396
- On the day the armistice was signed, Emilie Schindler recalled how her husband
ordered loudspeakers to be installed at the factory and assembled all the
workers to listen to Winston Churchill announcing the
unconditional surrender of the Germans. Then, his wife at his side, he announced that in view of the
situation the factory would close and everyone was free to go where they
pleased. He regretted that there was nothing more he could do for them.
"I felt very proud to be there at his side," Emilie Schindler
recalled.
The workers then prepared a document, which most of them signed, testifying to what the Schindlers had done for them.
Source/Notes:
After a day of Nazi Aktion roundups and executions of Jews in Krakow, as quoted in Schindler's List (1982) by Thomas Keneally, Ch. 15
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SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/265168]
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Source/Notes:
What Oskar Schindler said to the 300 women he saved on their return to his factory.
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SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/265166]
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Oskar
Schindler on friendship
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SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/265167]
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