An Existential Hero: Oskar Schindler

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1. Introduction

Oskar Schindler was a hero of his time, negotiating the lives of countless Jews, and defying the raging machine that was the Nazi party. He used tools that the Nazi 's used: deceit, black market trading, and bribery, however he utilized these to work within the party to save Jews. Though no one knows his exact motives, that doesn 't change the fact that he performed an enormous good for a race of people. Oskar Schindler was an exististential hero because he faced alienation, displayed courage, and rose above the absurdity despite the changing of his concrete situation.

2. Alienation

Due to his actions, Oskar Schindler risked alienation by his peers. Born German, he was raised in a Catholic household. However, this did …show more content…

They have willingly chosen to reason falsely against the Jews, in order for them to appear impentrable (Anti Semite and Jew, p. 18). They chose to blame the Jews for all of their troubles, and to hate them faithfully, devaluing both words and reason (p. 19). They chose to appear more powerful to the rest of the world by intimidation, not by sound argument (p. 20). To the Nazi 's, the Jews were the lowest rung of the social ladder. Regardless of the how poor or powerless a man was, he could at least turn his head to the Jews as being lower than he was.They wished to keep things the way they were, longing for that nostalgia of the Aryan race 's superiority. They saw the mass killing of Jews as the justification for their existence (p. 51), and fled their responsibilities as humans. They wish to be impervious to reason and experience, and to be terrifiyingly convicted in their actions (p. 20). The Nazi party was closed to all doubt in their minds that they were in the wrong, and their people were coherced into being part of the crowd, part of the hive mind against the …show more content…

Schindler before had a concrete situation, filled with sin, money, and "exploits with women [that] was the stuff of barroom legend" (Jewish Virtual Library). The situation changed with the occupation of Hitler and the Nazi party. This man highlighted by greed and lust changed in his situation to a hero, defining his existence (Sartre). The anti-semitic behavior of the Nazi 's, characterized by hate and devoid of reason, was the change that occured in Schindler 's situation (Anti-Semite and Jew p. 19). Even though his concrete situation changed around him, Schindler went above it and defined himself as a

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