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  1. Schindler wrote the names and jobs of 1,200 Jews at the Plaszow concentration camp and gave the list to the Nazi SS. No one at Yad Vashem, Israel's Holocaust memorial museum, had ever seen the original list.

  2. When the camp is ready, he orders the ghetto liquidated: two thousand Jews are transported to Płaszów, and two thousand others are killed in the streets by the SS. Schindler witnesses the massacre and is profoundly affected.

  3. Feb 10, 2023 · In addition to the approximately 1,000 Jewish forced laborers registered as factory workers, Schindler permitted 450 Jews working in other nearby factories to live at Emalia as well. This saved them from the systematic brutality and arbitrary murder that was part of daily life in Plaszow.

    • How many Jews were in Schindler's list?1
    • How many Jews were in Schindler's list?2
    • How many Jews were in Schindler's list?3
    • How many Jews were in Schindler's list?4
    • Background
    • Database
    • Acknowledgments

    The city of Kraków, located in southern Poland, was once theroyal capital of the kingdom. About 60,000 Jews lived therein 1939 out of a population of 250,000 people. Most of theJews resided in the old historical section of Kazimierz. The Germans occupied the city on September 6, 1939. Shortly thereafter, Hitler appointed Frank as the ruler of occup...

    This database includes 1,980 names of individuals combined fromtwo separate lists: 1. List A:Last and final list of Schindler's inmates fromBruennlitz, Czechoslovakia, printed in April, 1945. The inmates were sent to Czechoslovakia from the camp at Plaszów,Poland. The Bruennlitz camp was liberated by the RussianRed Army in 1945. 2. List B: This lis...

    The names contained in this database were transliterated by BillLiebner from the list of names published in the Hebrew Press. (The paper in question is no longer in existence and has beenout of print for many years.) Bill Leibner donated this list to JewishGen. USHMMprovided List B. In addition, thanks to JewishGen Inc. for providing the websiteand...

  4. A fictional recreation of the story of Oskar Schindler, an industrialist who saved 1,100 Jews from death by employing them in his factory in Kraków. Drawn from authentic records, the testimony of many of those saved by Schindler, and the author's extensive research.

  5. Schindler saved hundreds of Jews by hir­ing them to work in an enamel factory, an industry that was relatively safe from the Nazi authorities because its products were needed for the war effort. But he needs help to run the factory, which the German au­thorities initially finance, and so he turns to a skilled Jewish accountant, Itzhak Stern ...

  6. Jan 3, 2024 · For as much death and inhumanity as there is on the screen, the final message of the film is how those 1,200 Jews saved by Oskar Schindler had, by 1993, multiplied to 6,000. Thirty years on, that number may have doubled.

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