Zitate von Oskar Schindler
Oskar Schindler
Geburtstag: 28. April 1908
Todesdatum: 9. Oktober 1974
Oskar Schindler war ein deutschmährischer Unternehmer, der während des Zweiten Weltkrieges gemeinsam mit seiner Frau etwa 1200 bei ihm angestellte jüdische Zwangsarbeiter vor der Ermordung in den Vernichtungslagern der Nationalsozialisten bewahrte.
Zitate Oskar Schindler
Remark in 1972, as quoted in "Schindler : Why did he do it?" (2010) by Louis Bülow.
Interview at Am Hauptbahn No. 4 in Frankfurt Am Main, West Germany (1964), quoted in The Oscar Schindler Story (2012) http://www.auschwitz.dk/id2.htm.
Kontext: 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.
„Beyond this day, no thinking person could fail to see what would happen.“
After witnessing a day of Nazi roundups of Jews in Krakow, as quoted in Schindler's List (1982) by Thomas Keneally, Ch. 15. <!-- also in Courage to Care (1992) by the Jewish Museum of Australia -->
Kontext: 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.
„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.
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 http://www.auschwitz.dk/why/why.htm
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
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 http://www.auschwitz.dk/why/why.htm.