Spruchkammermeldebogen von Emilie Schindler (1907-2001)

Staatsarchiv Amberg

Description

During WWII, Emilie Schindler (1907-2001), together with her husband Oskar (1908-1974), saved over 1,200 Jews from death in the NS concentration camps. As owners of a war-relevant enamelware factory near Cracow (Kraków, Poland), which had been transferred in 1944 to Brünnlitz (Brněnec, Czech Republic), they managed under the most considerable personal risks to employ Jewish people under relatively good working conditions and to save them from the threat of deportation. After the end of the war, Emilie Schindler lived from 1945 to 1950 together with her husband in Ratisbon, where the denazification procedure was ceased against her as a person “not concerned by the law” on 31 October 1947. Emilie and Oskar Schindler gained worldwide renown through the film Schindler’s List by the US-American director Steven Spielberg in 1993.

Rights Statement Description

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0