Lebenslauf von oskar schindler biography
Oskar Schindler was a German businessman who saved the lives of more than 1, Jews during the Holocaust by employing them in his factories.
By employing them in his factory, Schindler protected them from the wrath of the Nazi Party and preserved generations of Jewish families. The region where Oskar grew up and attended a German-language school was also known as the Sudetenland. Oskar's father, Hans Schindler, was a factory owner and his mother, Louisa Schindler, was a homemaker.
Oskar had one younger sister named Elfriede with whom he had a close relationship, despite a seven-year age difference. As a child, Schindler was popular and had many friends, but he was not an exceptional student. Among his childhood playmates were the two sons of a local rabbi. During the s Schindler worked for his father selling farm equipment.
In , however, the young man's marriage to a woman named Emilie caused problems in the relationship between the two men and Schindler left his father's business to work as a sales manager for a Moravian electric company. Meanwhile, the political landscape in Europe was undergoing major changes, especially in Germany, where Adolf Hitler — and his Nazi Party began their rise to power.
Hitler began stirring up ethnic feelings among the Sudeten Germans, pointing out that their "rightful" ties were with Germany, not Czechoslovakia.
Geschichte des Bestandsbildners Auszug aus einem Lebenslauf, von Oskar Schindler am Oktober verfasst: geboren am in.
Schindler joined, too—not out of any love for the Nazis, but because it made business sense to go along with the prevailing wind. Within a week, Schindler arrived in Krakow, Poland, eager to find a way to profit from the conflict in one way or another. In mid-October, the city became the new seat central location of government for all of Nazi-occupied Poland.
Schindler quickly created friendships with key officers in both the Wehrmacht the German army and the SS the special armed Nazi unit , offering them black-market illegal goods such as cognac and cigars. It was around this same time that he met Itzhak Stern, a Jewish accountant who would eventually help his relations with the local Jewish business community.
Schindler purchased a bankrupt kitchenware factory and opened it in January Stern was hired on as the bookkeeper and soon developed a close relationship with his employer.