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Thomas Keneally's Schindler's List

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Thomas Keneally's Schindler's List is the historical account of Oskar Schindler

and his heroic actions in the midst of the horrors of World War II Poland.

Schindler's List recounts the life of Oskar Schindler, and how he comes to

Poland in search of material wealth but leaves having saved the lives of over

1100 Jews who would most certainly have perished. The novel focuses on how

Schindler comes to the realization that concentration and forced labor camps are

wrong, and that many people were dying through no fault of their own. This

realization did not occur overnight, but gradually came to be as the business

man in Oskar Schindler turned into the savior of the Jews that had brought him

so much wealth. Schindler's List is not just a biography of Oskar Schindler, but

it is the story of how good can overcome evil and how charity can overcome

greed. Schindler's List begins with the early life of Oskar Schindler. The novel

describes his early family life in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and his

adolescence in the newly created state of Czechoslovakia. It tells of his

relationship with his father, and how his father left his mother. His mother is

also described in great detail. Like many Germans in the south, she was a devout

Catholic. She is described as being very troubled that her son would take after

her estranged husband with his negligence of Catholicism. Oskar never forgave

Hans, his father, for his abandonment of his mother , which is ironic

considering that Oskar would do the same with his wife Emilie. In fact Hans and

Oskar Schindler's lives would become so much in parallel that the novel

describes their relationship as "that of brothers separated by the accident

of paternity." Oskar's relationship with Emilie is also described in detail

as is their marriage. The heart of the novel begins in October 1939 when Oskar

Schindler comes to the Polish city of Cracow. It has been six weeks since the

German's took the city, and Schindler sees great opportunity as any entrepreneur

would. For Schindler, Cracow represents a place of unlimited possibilities

because of the current economic disorder and cheap labor. Upon his arrival in

Cracow he meets Itzak Stern, a Jewish bookkeeper. Schindler is very impressed

with Stern because of his business prowess and his connections in the business

community. Soon Schindler and Stern are on their way to the creation of a

factory that would run on Jewish labor. Around this time, the persecution of the

Jews of Poland begins with their forced relocation into ghettoes. This turns out

to be timely for Schindler as now he is able to get very cheap labor. The next

few years would go well for Schindler and his factory for they turned a great

profit. In fact he made so much money that he is quoted as saying, "I've

made more money than I could possibly spend in a lifetime." His workers

were also very happy. This is because "Schindler's Jews" were treated

as humans as opposed to being treated as animals. For them, working in

Schindler's factory was an escape from the ghetto and from much German cruelty.

They loved Schindler so much that his factory became known as a haven throughout

the Jewish community. However, things began to go sour for Schindler, when the

Germans ordered the liquidation of the ghettoes. Soon all of the Jews in the

Cracow

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