The authentic “Schindler’s List,” in which German businessman Oskar Schindler saved over 1,200 Jewish lives during the Holocaust, is up for auction.
Schindler’s First Jewish List was compiled in the autumn of 1944 by Schindler, Stern, and Mitek Pemper, a prisoner of Pushch who was employed as a personal clerk for the notorious concentration camp commander Amon Geese. . Ta.
This list was used by Schindler to protect workers rescued from the camps when Nazi Germany withdrew from the East and then began to close the easternmost extermination camps. .
Prisoners of war from Camp No.
were transferred west to the gas chambers of Auschwitz. When Schindler moved the factory, he had already used bribes to protect the Jews working in his enamel factory, so he persuaded the Goths to allow the labor to move to the Sudetenland. The Guardian reported that this action saved them from certain annihilation.
Schindler was willing to squander his own fortune on bribes to keep his employees out of the gas chambers. In 1963 he was honored by the Israeli government and declared Righteous Among the Nations.
In 1974, Schindler died in poverty. When he died, he was the only former NSDAP member buried on Mount Zion in Jerusalem. In fact, it is worth noting that over 8,000 people currently living independently are of Jewish descent and are protected by Schindler’s efforts.
By the end of the war, Schindler had spent his entire fortune bribing people to buy black market goods for his employees. Issue No.
Oskar moved briefly to Regensburg and then to Munich, but was unsuccessful in post-war Germany. He was practically penniless. In fact, the support he could get was limited to Jewish organizations.
In 1948, he filed a claim with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Commission for reimbursement of war expenses. Estimated at over $1,056,000, he covered the costs of building the camp, taking bribes, and buying black market goods, including food. He received his $15,000 refund.
Schindler emigrated to Argentina in 1949, where he experimented with raising chickens and coipes, small animals raised for fur.
Commemorative plaque at the Schindler House in Regensburg.
When the company went bankrupt in 1958, he left his wife and returned to Germany, where he founded several failed companies, including a cement factory. He filed for bankruptcy in 1963 and suffered a heart attack the following year.
Oskar Schindler was a German businessman, spy, and Nazi who saved the lives of 1,200 Jews during the Holocaust by employing them in munitions and enamel factories.
After World War II, as a member of the NSDAP and intelligence services, Schindler was threatened with arrest as a war criminal.
Mr. Stern and several others prepared a statement to submit to the American public acknowledging their role in saving Jewish lives.
He also received a gold dental ring from the mouth of Schindler Jude Simon Jerrett. The ring is engraved with the words “He who saves life saves the whole world.” car seat. The Schindlers were initially on a treadmill with several fleeing German soldiers. Behind them stood Schindler’s lover Martha, several Jewish workers, and a truck full of black market goods.
Horch was confiscated by Russian troops in the town of Česke Budějovice, and Schindler was unable to retrieve the diamond. They traveled by train and on foot until they joined American lines at the town of Lenora, then headed for Passau, where a Jewish-American officer arranged a train trip to Switzerland. In the fall of 1945 they moved to Bavaria.
Schindler Factory, Krakow, 2011 4444
Schindler Factory, Brno (2004)
By the time the war was over, Schindler would bribe people to buy black market goods for his workers. spent all his fortune. Issue No.
Oskar moved briefly to Regensburg and then to Munich, but was unsuccessful in post-war Germany. He was practically penniless. In fact, the support he could get was limited to Jewish organizations.
In 1948, he filed a claim with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Commission for reimbursement of war expenses. The cost, he estimated, was more than $1.056 million, covering the cost of building the camp, taking bribes and buying black market goods, including food. He received his $15,000 refund.
Schindler moved to Argentina in 1949, where he experimented with raising chickens and coipes, small animals raised for their fur.
Commemorative plaque at the Schindler House in Regensburg.
When the company went bankrupt in 1958, he left his wife and returned to Germany, where he set up several businesses, including a cement factory, but failed. He filed for bankruptcy in 1963, and the following year had a heart attack that forced him to stay in the hospital for a month.
Schindler kept in touch with many of the Jews he met during the war, including Stern and Pfefferberg, and survived on donations sent from all over the world by Schindler-Uden.
He died on his October 9, 1974 and was buried on Mount Zion in Jerusalem. He is the only NSDAP member to be honored in this way.
Schindler’s Tomb in Jerusalem. A Hebrew inscription reads, “Righteous among the nations.” The German inscription reads, “Unforgettable lifesaver of 1,200 persecuted Jews,”
in honor of his service during the war.