In the movie Schindler's list it was called "DEUTSCHE EMAILWARENFABRIK". It was also called "Emalia" for short.The abbreviation was D.E.F.
He also had another factory where he made artillery shells that were 100% inneffective but i dont know the name for it.
Emilie Schindler, her maiden name was Pelzl
Schindler's factory, officially known as Oskar Schindler's Enamelware Factory, operated from 1939 to 1945 during World War II. Initially focused on producing enamelware, the factory later became a haven for Jewish workers, as Schindler sought to protect them from the Holocaust. His efforts resulted in the saving of over a thousand Jewish lives. After the war, the factory ceased operations as the war came to an end.
They made made pots and pans as well as many types munitions including artillary shells though it has been said by both Oskar Schindler and the SchindlerJuden (Shindler Jews) that all munitions were faulty. To make this roughly 1200 Jewish workers were used all saved by Oskar Shindler and those who helped him!
in the factory
Yes, the movie Schindler's list includes many actual events that occured during the holocaust. It is based mostly on Oskar Schindler and his humanity, but it does touch on things that actually did occur during the holocaust. There are a few historical inaccuracies in the movie but in general it is a good source of information about the holocaust and its included events.
Deutsche Emaillewaren-Fabrik, the name of Oskar Schindlers factory.
Emilie Schindler, her maiden name was Pelzl
If you are referring to the man who saved Jews, his first name was Oskar.
Itzhak Stern made the list of Schindlerjuden. In English, those German words mean "Schindlers Jews"
He didn't; he made them work in his factory.
Since I'm not Oskar Schindler, I couldn't tell you and guarantee my answer. However; the Nazis taking his Jews were probably one of his biggest fears
pots and pans , things pertaining to keeping what the Germans wanted.
In WWII Poland, a Nazi saved the lives of over 1,100 Jews by employing them in his factory.
It seems possible for Oskar Schindler to bring the Jews into his factory and not want to save them, which is echoed throughout Thomas Keneally's book Schindlers Ark and Steven Speilbergs portrayal of Oskar Schindler in Schindler's List. However is it evidential proof that Oskar in the end saved around 1200 Jews from the Nazi's and it seems more logical to believe that he employed these Jews in his factory to protect them from those who did not share his belief such as Nazi SS member Amon Goeth. It is more simple and understandable to believe that Oskar only claimed the Schindlerjuden as essential workers that were nessessary for his factory's production and that he employed them to save them from a more disasterous fate of continued forced labour as Plaszow or certain death after a relocation to the Nazi death camps, most noticeably Auschwitz. There was no business motive for Oskar when he continued to look after and protect the Schindlerjuden, even at times, for example, when the Schindlerfrauen were sent to Auschwitz instead of Brinnlitz. Oskar's only motive to employing the Jews and bringing them into his factory was to save them and give them a chance of a second life after the end of the Second World War.
Schindler was born April 28, 1908 in Svitavy (German: Zwittau), Moravia, then part of Austria-Hungary, now in the Czech Republic.
Oskar Schindler
By selling potatoes