In "Schindler's List," Jews wanted to work in Oskar Schindler's factory as it offered a chance for survival during the Holocaust. Being employed there provided them with relative safety from deportation to concentration camps, as Schindler's factory was deemed essential for war production. Additionally, the factory provided food, shelter, and a sense of community, making it a beacon of hope in a dire situation. Ultimately, working for Schindler represented a lifeline amidst the pervasive threat of death.
Itzhak Stern made the list of Schindlerjuden. In English, those German words mean "Schindlers Jews"
He owned a factory in Nazi Germany and is credited with saving the lives of 1200 Jews by employing them in his enamelware and ammunition factory. He spent his fortune saving the Jews and died broke. Today there are 7,000 descendants of the Schindler Jews living in the United States and Europe.
In WWII Poland, a Nazi saved the lives of over 1,100 Jews by employing them in his factory.
Oskar Schindler
He didn't; he made them work in his factory.
No he kept the jews in the factory safe and the jews worked for him this was so good of Oskar Schindler even though he was a german person he save millions of jews
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
I would be dead...
The Krakow Ghetto in southern Poland.
Oskar Schindler saved almost 1,200 Jews during WWII.
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.
I guess the Schindler Jews had not had their Sabbath in a while and it was a kind gesture by Schindler. They had been working hard in his factory and the Sabbath is a day of rest and worship, so it was a break as well