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Schindler

SCHINDLER

This exhibition tells the story of Oskar Schindler, the German-Catholic industrialist and rescuer of Jews during the Holocaust who was the subject of the film Schindler's List. Following the Nazi invasion of Poland in 1939, Schindler moved to Krakow and established an enamel works on the city's outskirts in Zablocie. That factory became a haven for about 900 Jewish workers, providing them relief from the brutality of the Plaszow labor camp nearby. In October 1944, Schindler was granted permission to relocate his enamel works to Bruennlitz, Czechoslovakia (this time as an armaments factory) and to take with him the Jewish workers from Zablocie. Through negotiations and bribes that depleted his war profits, Schindler was able to transfer more than 1,000 Jewish workers from Plaszow, ensuring their humane treatment and ultimately saving their lives.

 
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Traveling exhibitions
Deadly MedicineDEADLY MEDICINE:
Creating the Master Race
Fighting the Fires of HateFIGHTING THE FIRES OF HATE:
America and the Nazi Book Burnings
The Nazi OlympicsTHE NAZI OLYMPICS:
Berlin 1936
Nazi Persecution of HomosexualsNAZI PERSECUTION OF HOMOSEXUALS:
1933-1945
SchindlerSCHINDLER
"[The] exhibition...helps people become aware of the horror that can come from hatred."
BATTLE CREEK CHRONICLE, 2002
Varian FryVARIAN FRY:
Assignment Rescue 1940-1941
Contact us
traveling@ushmm.org
202.314.0325
This exhibition is ideal for:
Small History Museums
Small Jewish Museums
Small Historical Societies
Holocaust Centers or Museums
Community Centers
Libraries
Colleges or Universities