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1、Thomas Keneally Schindlers ArkThomas KeneallySCHINDLERS ARKTO THE MEMORY OF OSKAR SCHINDLER, AND TO LEOPOLD PFEFFERBERG, WHO BY ZEAL AND PERSISTENCE CAUSED THIS BOOK TO BE WRITTENAUTHORS NOTEIn 1980 I visited a luggage store in Beverly Hills, California, and inquired the prices of briefcases. The st

2、ore belonged to Leopold Pfefferberg, a Schindler survivor. It was beneath Pfefferbergs shelves of imported Italian leather goods that I first heard of Oskar Schindler, the German bon vivant, speculator, charmer, and sign of contradiction, and of his salvage of a cross section of a condemned race dur

3、ing those years now known by the generic name Holocaust.This account of Oskars astonishing history is based in the first place on interviews with 50 Schindler survivors from seven nationsAustralia, Israel, West Germany, Austria, the United States, Argentina, and Brazil. It is enriched by a visit, in

4、 the company of Leopold Pfefferberg, to locations that prominently figure in the book: Cracow, Oskars adopted city; Paszw, the scene of Amon Goeths foul labor camp; Lipowa Street, Zablocie, where Oskars factory still stands; AuschwitzBirkenau, from which Oskar extracted his women prisoners. But the

5、narration depends also on documentary and other information supplied by those few wartime associates of Oskars who can still be reached, as well as by the large body of his postwar friends. Many of the plentiful testimonies regarding Oskar deposited by Schindler Jews at Yad Vashem, The Martyrs and H

6、eroes Remembrance Authority, further enriched the record, as did written testimonies from private sources and a body of Schindler papers and letters, some supplied by Yad Vashem, some by Oskars friends.To use the texture and devices of a novel to tell a true story is a course that has frequently bee

7、n followed in modern writing. It is the one I chose to follow hereboth because the novelists craft is the only one I can lay claim to, and because the novels techniques seem suited for a character of such ambiguity and magnitude as Oskar. I have attempted, however, to avoid all fiction, since fictio

8、n would debase the record, and to distinguish between reality and the myths which are likely to attach themselves to a man of Oskars stature. It has sometimes been necessary to make reasonable constructs of conversations of which Oskar and others have left only the briefest record. But most exchange

9、s and conversations, and all events, are based on the detailed recollections of the Schindlerjuden (schindler Jews), of Schindler himself, and of other witnesses to Oskars acts of outrageous rescue.I would like to thank first three Schindler survivorsLeopold Pfefferberg, Justice Moshe Bejski of the

10、Israeli Supreme Court, and Mieczyslaw Pemperwho not only passed on their memories of Oskar to the author and gave him certain documents which have contributed to the accuracy of the narrative, but also read the early draft of the book and suggested corrections.Many others, whether Schindler survivor

11、s or Oskars postwar associates, gave interviews and generously contributed information through letters and documents. These include Frau Emilie Schindler, Mrs. Ludmila Pfefferberg, Dr. Sophia Stern, Mrs. Helen Horowitz, Dr. Jonas Dresner, Mr. and Mrs. Henry and Mariana Rosner, Leopold Rosner, Dr. Al

12、ex Rosner, Dr. Idek Schindel, Dr. Danuta Schindel, Mrs. Regina Horowitz, Mrs. Bronislawa Karakulska, Mr. Richard Horowitz, Mr. Shmuel Springmann, the late Mr. Jakob Sternberg, Mr. Jerzy Sternberg, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Fagen, Mr. Henry Kinstlinger, Mrs. Rebecca Bau, Mr. Edward Heuberger, Mr. and Mrs. M

13、. Hirschfeld, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Glovin, and many others. In my home city, Mr. and Mrs. E. Korn not only gave of their memories of Oskar but were a constant support. At Yad Vashem, Dr. Josef Kermisz, Dr. Shmuel Krakowski, Vera Prausnitz, Chana Abells, and Hadassah Modlinger provided generous access

14、 to the testimonies of Schindler survivors and to video and photographic material.Lastly, I would like to honor the efforts which the late Mr. Martin Gosch expended on bringing the name of Oskar Schindler to the worlds notice, and to signify my thanks to his widow, Mrs. Lucille Gaynes, for her coope

15、ration with this project. Through the assistance of all these people, Oskar Schindlers astonishing history appears for the first time in extended form.TOM KENEALLYPROLOGUEAutumn, 1943In Polands deepest autumn, a tall young man in an expensive overcoat, doublebreasted dinner jacket beneath it andin t

16、he lapel of the dinner jacketa large ornamental goldonblackenamel Hakenkreuz (swastika) emerged from a fashionable apartment building in Straszewskiego Street, on the edge of the ancient center of Cracow, and saw his chauffeur waiting with fuming breath by the open door of an enormous and, even in this blackened world, lustrous Adler limousine. “Watch the pavement, Herr Schindler,” said the chauffeur. “Its as

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