One of my favorite The first rundown of Schindlerjuden (Schindler's Jews) who were transported to Schindler's industrial facility in Brünnlitz was set up by Mietek Pemper, Itzhak Stern and Oskar Schindler at the turn of September and October 1944. That rundown likely never again exist.
Another rundown with 1,000 names, ordered by previous camp stenographer Mieczyslaw Pemper upon the detainees' landing 21 October 1944 at Schindler's Brünnlitz industrial facility, was exhibited by Pemper to the International Tracing Service in 1958.
Two arrangements of 1,098 detainees made by the camp organization in Brünnlitz on 18 April 1945 are surviving, and are protected in Yad Vashem Memorial, where Oskar and Emilie Schindler are perceived among the Righteous. The principal list contains 297 female detainees while the second rundown contains 801 male detainees. There are a few safeguarded duplicates and duplicates of the rundown from April 1945, with some in historical centers while others are in private hands (for the most part of groups of previous detainees). In April 2009 a duplicate of the first rundown, archiving 801 names, was found among the documentation creator Keneally had given to the State Library of New South Wales in Sydney.
Another rundown with 1,000 names, ordered by previous camp stenographer Mieczyslaw Pemper upon the detainees' landing 21 October 1944 at Schindler's Brünnlitz industrial facility, was exhibited by Pemper to the International Tracing Service in 1958.
Two arrangements of 1,098 detainees made by the camp organization in Brünnlitz on 18 April 1945 are surviving, and are protected in Yad Vashem Memorial, where Oskar and Emilie Schindler are perceived among the Righteous. The principal list contains 297 female detainees while the second rundown contains 801 male detainees. There are a few safeguarded duplicates and duplicates of the rundown from April 1945, with some in historical centers while others are in private hands (for the most part of groups of previous detainees). In April 2009 a duplicate of the first rundown, archiving 801 names, was found among the documentation creator Keneally had given to the State Library of New South Wales in Sydney.