Keneally
states in his Author’s Note: ‘To use the texture and devices of a novel to tell
a true story is a course which has frequently been followed in modern writing.
It is one I have chosen to follow here; both because the craft of the novelist
is the only craft to which I can lay claim, and because the novel’s techniques
seem suited for a character of such ambiguity and magnitude as Oskar. I have
attempted to avoid all fiction, though, since fiction would debase the record, and
to distinguish between reality and the myths… Sometimes it has been necessary
to attempt to construct conversations of which Oskar and others have left only
the briefest record… But most exchanges and conversations and all events, are
based on the detailed recollections of the Schindler Jews, of Schindler
himself, and of other witnesses to Oskar’s acts of outrageous rescue.’
In
effect, Keneally succeeds beautifully. The documentary feel about it is perhaps
appropriate for the subject matter.
It’s
probable that Oskar Schindler needs no introduction these days, thanks to this
book, subsequent books and of course the Oscar-winning Spielberg film, Schindler’s List (1993).
Briefly, before
the war, Schindler worked for the Abwehr, the Nazi party’s intelligence
service, where he build up a number of contacts who proved useful to him when
he began an enamelware business in Cracow, taking over the Rekord works,
renaming it Deutsche Email Fabrik (DEF) [email before e-mail, indeed!] His
factory employed about 1,700, a thousand of them being Jews. Initially, he
seemed driven by the profit motive, when he wasn’t cheating on his wife and also
drinking to excess.
Then
war descended upon Poland and, gradually, he saw and heard of the inhuman
treatment meted out to the Jews by the German invaders and many Poles. He
addressed a number of newly recruited workers: ‘You’ll be safe working here. If
you work here, then you’ll live through the war.’ He was a big imposing man,
and yet many wondered how he could make such a promise. Didn’t he know what was
happening all around? His tone commanded belief.
Schindler
seemed to be an uncanny judge of character. SS Oberfuhrer Julian Scherner would
‘sometimes be discovered wearing the smirk of his unexpected power like a
childish jam-stain in the corner of his mouth. He was always convivial and
dependably heartless. Oskar could tell that Scherner favoured working the Jews
rather than killing them, that he would bend rules for the sake of profit…’ (p91)
Often, Oskar had to deal with and bribe men in authority, and always got what he
wanted.
SS
Hauptsturmfuhrer Amon Goeth was the commandant of the Kraków-Plaszów
concentration camp, which he had built by forced labour; here Oskar’s workers
were forced to live.
‘Oskar
had the characteristic salesman’s gift of treating men he abhorred as if they
were soul brothers, and it would deceive the Herr Commandant so completely that
Amon would always believe Oskar a friend… Oskar despised Goeth in the simplest
and most passionate terms. His contempt would grow without limit and his career
would dramatically demonstrate it.’ (p164)
Goeth
was a psychotic killer, who thought nothing of leaning out of his window and
shooting to death a passing worker in the camp. Oskar had the measure of him,
however, and during one of their drinking sessions together, he risked Amon
Goeth’s murderous ire: ‘… acting out of an amity which, even with this much
cognac aboard, did not go beyond the surface of the skin, merely a sort of
frisson, a phantom shiver of brotherhood running along the pores, nothing more –
Oskar, leaning towards Amon and cunning as a demon, began to tempt him towards
restraint.’ (216) And it seemed that Goeth became magnanimous, no longer
arbitrarily murdering people.
Oskar’s
deviousness knew no bounds. He constantly risked his position, his business,
all his money and his life by protecting his workers. There is an allusion to
good soldier Schweik, a First World War character created by Jaroslav Hasek, ‘to
foul up the system’ (p229). That was Oskar’s Czech ancestry. Schweik bamboozled
authority with his comic incompetence, puncturing pomposity and highlighting
military stupidity (my copy of The Good
Soldier Schweik and His Fortunes in
the World War translated by Cecil Parrot proved useful in my research for The Prague Papers!)
There
are many painful and memorable moments in this book. Take, for example, the
three-year-old child. Even at that age she had her vanities – ‘a passionately
preferred colour. Red. She sat there in red cap, red coat, small red boots…’
(p100) – more of which anon.
Rumours
in closed societies can be debilitating, dangerous and destructive. Whispers
about salt mines, being buried alive… ‘All this hearsay, much of which reached
Oskar, was based on a human instinct to prevent the evil by voicing it; to
forestall the fates by showing them that you could be as imaginative as they.
But that June all the worst of the dreams and whispers took concrete form and
the most unimaginable rumour became fact.’ While out horse riding, Oskar
witnessed the clearing of part of the ghetto, and he saw a little girl, a
toddler, being shepherded with the doomed men and women by SS guards, and the
toddler was wearing a small scarlet coat and cap. Before moving out of sight,
the child witnessed abhorrent brutality and murder. Afterwards, Oskar realised
that the culprits ‘permitted witnesses, such witnesses as the red toddler, because
they believed all the witnesses would perish too.’ (p123)
Even
disallowing the moral dimension, it beggared belief that the Nazi war machine
would squander so many resources on the ‘Final Solution’, diverting transport,
troops, administrators, and weapons in their insane mission of extermination.
Eventually,
towards the end of the war, Oskar realised he had to move his workforce out of
Poland before they were selected for the crematoria. Not without much conniving,
effort, and payment – kilos of tea, leather shoes, carpets, coffee, canned fish
– he arranged for his Jews to be transferred to a factory in Moravia. A list
was created and the authorities sanctioned the move for all on the list. There
was privation and despair before they all finally arrived at the new factory,
however...
Ultimately, Oskar saved 1,200 Jews by employing them– and he was such a con-man that they never produced one item that aided the German war effort. At the time of liberation, those he saved spread to countries round the world.
Keneally’s
book is moving without lurching into sentimentality, and provides many psychological insights, some touched upon in the few quotations above. The writing is at times almost
poetic: ‘… without the evidence of the crematoria, the dead could offer no
witness, were a whisper behind the wind, an inconsequential dust on the aspen
leaves.’
The film condenses much of the book, starkly in black-and-white – save for that shot of the little girl in red. The presence of Liam Neeson as Oskar dominates the screen. The other characters are faithfully acted, notably Ben Kinglsey as Itshak Stern, Oskar’s accountant and conscience, and Ralph Fiennes is horribly real as Goeth.
This film should be viewed at least once in a lifetime.
And this book should be read, too.
When Oskar Schindler died in 1974, ‘he was mourned in every nation.’ (p401).
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