Oskar Schindler was a business person who, like may others, hoped to profit from the invasion of Poland. He became a member of the Nazi Party spy and he ran enamel and munitions factories that helped the Nazi war effort. He employed more than 1200 Jews as slave laborers in his Krakow factory. Throughout his rebellious campaign to protect as many sufferers as possible, Schindler selflessly sacrificed all that he could and all that was important to him for the benefit of others. Nevertheless, when the Nazis emptied Krakow’s Jewish to ghettos and sent the Jews to death camps, Schindler did everything he could to protect those who worked in his factor. After several years of successfully operating, Schindler’s factory was closed down in 1942 and all its workers deported to a death camp out of the country. Steaming with rage, Schindler demanded the SS give him back his laborers, arguing that they were essential to the German army’s success. When the SS refused, Schindler’s advantageous talent for persuasion kicked in and he proposed that he build an entirely new labor camp next to Plaszow out of his own pocket in which his employees would continue working for him and remain untouched by Nazi guards. He was trying to do two to three things at once
Oskar Schindler was a business person who, like may others, hoped to profit from the invasion of Poland. He became a member of the Nazi Party spy and he ran enamel and munitions factories that helped the Nazi war effort. He employed more than 1200 Jews as slave laborers in his Krakow factory. Throughout his rebellious campaign to protect as many sufferers as possible, Schindler selflessly sacrificed all that he could and all that was important to him for the benefit of others. Nevertheless, when the Nazis emptied Krakow’s Jewish to ghettos and sent the Jews to death camps, Schindler did everything he could to protect those who worked in his factor. After several years of successfully operating, Schindler’s factory was closed down in 1942 and all its workers deported to a death camp out of the country. Steaming with rage, Schindler demanded the SS give him back his laborers, arguing that they were essential to the German army’s success. When the SS refused, Schindler’s advantageous talent for persuasion kicked in and he proposed that he build an entirely new labor camp next to Plaszow out of his own pocket in which his employees would continue working for him and remain untouched by Nazi guards. He was trying to do two to three things at once