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Schindler

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Schindler s List Oskar Schindler He was a German from Czechoslovakia Born in 1908 Raised a strict catholic There were Jews in his class at school He lived next door ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Schindler


1
Schindlers List
2
Oskar Schindler
  • He was a German from Czechoslovakia
  • Born in 1908
  • Raised a strict catholic
  • There were Jews in his class at school
  • He lived next door to a rabbi growing up
  • Before the war, he was a small time salesman and
    not very successful

3
What kind of man was Schindler
  • People called him
  • A swindler
  • Der grosse Lebemann (Emilie Schindler, his
    wife), a man who loves to live life to its
    fullest.
  • Charming, vain, handsome, womanizer, alcoholic,
    flamboyant, gambler, risk taker
  • Loved living life on the edge, and to be the
    center of attention
  • Liked to play the playboy spy.

4
How did the Germans see him
  • For the Nazi party, he was a party member since
    1939.
  • He was a loyal agent for military intelligence.
  • He was used as a spy. He provided for the war
    effort.
  • He provided Polish army uniforms to German
    provocateurs who attacked a German border radio
    station the night before the invasion of Poland.
    The station was said to have been overrun by
    Polish soldiers. Actually, it was Germans
    dressed as Poles. This provided an excuse to
    invade.

5
Schindler during the war
  • Was arrested repeatedly (3 times by the SS).
  • Usually arrested for black market fraud.
  • His connections always got him out.
  • He ended up being the only German to save more
    than 1,000 Jews from the death camps.

6
Quote from Interview with Spielberg
  • The Quote is about adapting the film from the
    novel.
  • The difficulty was what we could not use because
    we just did not have time to use it. . . . I had
    to . . . Find a way of taking the novel, and not
    so much distill it, but just find all the moments
    that moved me the most and were the most
    informative.

7
Quote from Interview with Spielberg (Continued)
  • In the process of Schindlers almost transparent
    transformation from a businessman to a savior,
    the novel did not give me those clues. It did
    not tell me why Schindler did it. And none of
    the witnesses could tell me why Schindler did it,
    even though I asked everybody I met.

8
Schindlers motivation
  • Point of some debate among the Schindler Jews.
  • Some said he was an opportunist who saved the
    Jews because it was self-serving, or because he
    loved to outwit the SS.
  • Others believed his motivation to be purely to
    save lives.
  • But for most of the Schindler Jews, they simply
    know that he saved them and that is all that
    matters.

9
The Change of Heart
  • One survivor claims he witnessed Schindlers
    change of heart.
  • After seeing Goeth shoot two girls shortly before
    they died from hanging, Schindler got ill in
    front of everyone, turned to the survivor and
    stated that he would never work for the Germans
    again.

10
He did show his Jews kindness
  • He permitted them to observe holidays.
  • He went to great lengths to make them feel safe.
  • He slept in the factory himself, although a villa
    was available in Brinnlitz.
  • He provided extra food and medicine.
  • Some of this is portrayed in the film.

11
History vs. the Film
  • At the end of the war, Schindler had to flee
    because the Russians would have shot him without
    a trial.
  • Some of his Jewish workers smuggled him out as a
    camp survivor.
  • Unlike the film portrayal, however, he escaped in
    a Mercedes full of valuables.
  • These were later looted and stripped from him and
    he arrived with nothing in the American zone.

12
While with the Americans
  • He gave American investigators evidence against
    his former Nazi drinking buddies.
  • American Jews helped get him to Switzerland.

13
After the war
  • He lived in different parts of West Germany.
  • He lived for a time with Jews in Argentina.
  • His grand schemes never worked out.
  • He was at his best during war time.
  • He lived in Israel for a time and was celebrated,
    and bestowed the title of righteous gentile. A
    tree was planted for him in the avenue of the
    righteous.
  • When he returned to Germany, he lived in poverty
    and obscurity.

14
Schindlers death
  • He died at age 66 of a failed heart and liver.
  • He was buried in Israel in 1974.
  • His grave is shown in the film at the end.

15
Krakow
  • The story takes place in Krakow.
  • 26 of the population was Jewish.
  • Shows the Krakow-Plaszow labor camp.
  • In Krakow during the Holocaust, the Jews invited
    a wall around their ghetto to protect them from
    Polish citizens.
  • Krakow was a bastion of Jewish culture, but also
    of anti-Semitism.
  • The Jews thought of the walls as a fortress
    against anti-Semitism.

16
Krakow
  • When the Nazis came, the Jews almost willingly
    moved to the ghetto.
  • They expected to need their fortress, they knew
    that there was a great deal of hatred toward them
    in the Polish population.

17
The Accuracy of the Film
  • Everywhere the Schindler Jews got preferential
    treatment. Accurate.
  • Shows Brinnlitz, Czechoslovakia
  • Near Schindlers home town.
  • The film shows this accurately, shows the stops
    on the way there, except that the men also
    stopped in Groess-Rosen for a week.
  • The women were in Auschwitz for 3 weeks.
    Schindler had to bribe their way out.

18
The List
  • The list had 297 women and 800 men on it.
  • The first list made was not very accurate and
    hastily made.
  • Schindler added 80 names from a frozen
    transport, a transport from an Auschwitz
    subcamp. They were left in the cold for 10 days
    with no food or water.
  • So he saved more people than just his workers.

19
The List
  • The list was actually made by Marcel Goldberg,
    the greedy Jewish policeman in the film.
  • This was the source of much bitterness.
  • Only those who bribed him got on the list.
  • Schindler said, he did not have the time to
    constantly check up on him.
  • Some survivors threatened Schindler because of
    this.

20
The Film
  • It took more than a decade to prepare to make the
    film.
  • The shooting of the film was done in actual
    locations.
  • The interior and exterior of Schindlers
    apartment.
  • The interior and exterior of the prison.
  • Almost every place was authentic.
  • The Plaszow camp was recreated.
  • The shot in Auschwitz had to be shot outside the
    gate because of resistance to having a film shot
    inside.

21
Steven Spielberg
  • The worlds most commercially successful film
    maker.
  • Perhaps best known for Jurasic Park and Indiana
    Jones.
  • For him, the film was a personal reawakening of
    his Jewish faith.
  • He found a great deal of anti-Semitism exists in
    Poland still today. There were several incidents.

22
Poland
  • Very few Jews live in Poland today.
  • Because of the anti-Semitism that still exists
    there, Jews do not want to return.
  • Unfortunately, Hitler was especially successful
    in murdering most of the eastern European Jews.

23
Discussion Questions
  • How does this film compare to other films we have
    seen so far?
  • How does it use imagery and color?
  • What techniques does the film maker use?
  • Is the film successful in representing the
    Holocaust? Why or why not?
  • How is Schindler established as a character?

24
Discussion Questions
  • How is the changing relationship with Stern
    depicted?
  • What does the scene in which Schindler moves into
    his apartment represent?
  • How does the film show the bureaucracy, the
    obsession with order, that characterized the
    Holocaust?

25
Discussion Questions
  • What is the function of the scene in which
    Schindler chooses a secretary?
  • What is the function of the scene in which he is
    speaking to his wife about being remembered as
    the man who came with nothing and left with two
    steamer trucks filled with all the riches of the
    world?

26
Discussion Questions
  • What is the function of the scene in which he is
    confronted with the gratitude of the one armed
    man?
  • What does the scene in which Stern is almost
    taken to a camp show?
  • What is the relationship between Helen Hirsch and
    Goeth like? How does he feel about her? What
    does this show?

27
Discussion Questions
  • What does Goeth say about history? Today is
    history? What does he mean by that and why is it
    in the film?
  • What is the relationship between Goeth and
    Schindler? Are they alike? What do they think
    of each other?
  • Does the film portray a turning point for
    Schindler? Or is there more than one? Does one
    stand out? Why does it stand out? What
    techniques does the film maker employ to make it
    stand out?

28
Discussion Questions
  • What is the significance of the scene in which
    the rabbi making hinges is almost shot?
  • At one point Schindler begins to get rather
    brazen with his requests to help the Jews.
    Especially during the train episode in which he
    helps them get water. What does this scene show
    about his position among the Nazis?
  • What do you think of the scene in Schindlers
    List in which he is given the ring?

29
Discussion Questions
  • Why does he put on a camp uniform when he leaves
    the camp?
  • Who are the people putting stones on Schindlers
    grave in Israel?
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