Pantirer, Murray.

English, German,

Biographical notes:

Oskar Schindler was a native of Czechoslovakia and a Catholic. He operated a factory near Krakow, Poland, where he managed to save some 1,200 Jews from death during the Holocaust. After World War II, Schindler went to Argentina with the aid of those Jews, whom he saved from the concentration camps. He returned to Germany after several year in South American and worked for the German Friends of Hebrew University. He was named as a Righteous Gentile by Yad Vashem and was buried in Jerusalem after his death on 09 Oct 1974.

From the description of Oskar Schindler papers articles letters photographs lists. (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum). WorldCat record id: 122546279

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Subjects:

  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
  • Holocaust memorials
  • Jews
  • Jews
  • Names
  • Rescue
  • Righteous Among the Nations

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Plaszów (Poland : Concentration camp) (as recorded)
  • Kraków (Poland : Ghetto) (as recorded)
  • Brnenec (Czech Republic : Concentration camp) (as recorded)
  • Czechoslovakia (as recorded)
  • Poland (as recorded)
  • Rogoznica (Poland : Concentration camp) (as recorded)