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Schindler's List found in Sydney | Schindler's List found in Sydney |
(about 3 hours later) | |
A list compiled by the German industrialist Oskar Schindler has been discovered by a researcher at a library in Australia. | A list compiled by the German industrialist Oskar Schindler has been discovered by a researcher at a library in Australia. |
Schindler's list helped hundreds of Jewish workers escape death in the Holocaust during World War II. | |
It was found in research notes which belonged to the Australian author of Schindler's Ark - the basis for the Oscar-winning film, Schindler's List. | |
The document was found at the New South Wales Library in Sydney. | The document was found at the New South Wales Library in Sydney. |
It saved 801 men from the gas chambers - it's an incredibly moving piece of history Library co-curator Olwen Pryke | |
There are 13 pages of fragile, yellowing paper, upon which are typed the names and nationalities of 801 Jewish people. | There are 13 pages of fragile, yellowing paper, upon which are typed the names and nationalities of 801 Jewish people. |
They are being described as some of the most powerful documents of the 20th Century. | They are being described as some of the most powerful documents of the 20th Century. |
Gas chambers | |
The list was hurriedly typed on 18 April 1945, in the closing days of World War II, and compiled by Oskar Schindler, a card-carrying Nazi. | |
Schindler ran a factory in Krakow, Poland, during the war, where he used Jewish labour. | |
Appalled by the conduct of the Nazis, he sought to persuade officials that his workers were vital to the war effort and should be spared from the death camps. | |
"It saved 801 men from the gas chambers... It's an incredibly moving piece of history," library co-curator Olwen Pryke said. | |
This Schindler's list was found sandwiched between research notes and German newspaper clippings gathered by Australian author Thomas Keneally. | |
Ms Pryke said neither the library nor the book dealer, from whom it bought the six boxes of material in 1996, realised the list was hidden among the documents. | |
Mr Keneally was handed the list almost 30 years ago in a shop in Los Angeles, by one of the people whom Schindler helped - Leopold Pfefferberg, Jewish worker 173 on the list. | |
Mr Pfefferberg wanted the novelist to write Schindler's story. |
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