Schindler’s List

Schindler’s List

by

Thomas Keneally

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Schindler’s List makes teaching easy.
The SS (short for Schutzstaffel) was a leading paramilitary arm of the Nazi Party. More so than any other organization, they are considered responsible for the deaths of six million Jews and millions of other victims during the Holocaust, following the commands of leaders like Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler.

SS Quotes in Schindler’s List

The Schindler’s List quotes below are all either spoken by SS or refer to SS. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
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).
Chapter 8 Quotes

Before the Hilos had even been properly calibrated, Oskar began to get hints from his SS contacts at Pomorska Street that there was to be a ghetto for Jews. He mentioned the rumor to Stern, not wanting to arouse alarm. Oh, yes, said Stern, the word was out. Some people were even looking forward to it. We’ll be inside, the enemy will be outside. We can run our own affairs. No one will envy us, no one stone us in the streets. The walls of the ghetto will be fixed. The walls would be the final, fixed form of the catastrophe.

Related Characters: Oskar Schindler, Itzhak Stern, Hans Frank
Page Number: 84
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

The councilmen of Artur Rosenzweig’s Judenrat, who still saw themselves as guardians of the breath and health and bread ration of the internees of the ghetto, impressed upon the Jewish ghetto police that they were also public servants. They tended to sign up young men of compassion and some education. Though at SS headquarters the OD was regarded as just another auxiliary police force which would take orders like any police force, that was not the picture most OD men lived by in the summer of ’41.

Related Characters: Oskar Schindler
Page Number: 96
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 15 Quotes

His eyes slewed up Krakusa to the scarlet child. They were doing it within half a block of her; they hadn’t waited for her column to turn out of sight into Józefińska. Schindler could not have explained at first how that compounded the murders on the sidewalk. Yet somehow it proved, in a way no one could ignore, their serious intent. While the scarlet child stopped in her column and turned to watch, they shot the woman in the neck, and one of them, when the boy slid down the wall whimpering, jammed a boot down on his head as if to hold it still and put the barrel against the back of the neck—the recommended SS stance—and fired.

Related Characters: Oskar Schindler, Ingrid, Genia
Related Symbols: The Color Red
Page Number: 133
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

When Levartov and his wife came to the Emalia factory subcamp in the summer of ’43, he had to suffer what at first he believed to be Schindler’s little religious witticisms. On Friday afternoons, in the munitions hall of DEF where Levartov operated a lathe, Schindler would say, “You shouldn’t be here, Rabbi. You should be preparing for Shabbat.” But when Oskar slipped him a bottle of wine for use in the ceremonies, Levartov knew that the Herr Direktor was not joking. Before dusk on Fridays, the rabbi would be dismissed from his workbench and would go to his barracks behind the wire in the backyard of DEF. There, under the strings of sourly drying laundry, he would recite Kiddush over a cup of wine among the roof-high tiers of bunks. Under, of course, the shadow of an SS watchtower.

Related Characters: Oskar Schindler, Amon Goeth, Menasha Levartov
Page Number: 211
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 27 Quotes

On April 28, 1944, Oskar—by looking sideways at himself in a mirror—was able to tell that his waist had thickened for his thirty-sixth birthday. But at least today, when he embraced the girls, no one bothered to denounce him. Any informer among the German technicians must have been demoralized, since the SS had let Oskar out of Pomorska and Montelupich, both of them centers supposed impregnable to influence.

Related Characters: Oskar Schindler
Related Symbols: Schindler’s Birthday
Page Number: 250
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 33 Quotes

“I’m getting them out,” Schindler rumbled. He did not go into explanations. He did not publicly surmise that the SS in Auschwitz might need to be bribed. He did not say that he had sent the list of women to Colonel Erich Lange, or that he and Lange both intended to get them to Brinnlitz according to the list. Nothing of that. Simply “I’m getting them out.”

Related Characters: Oskar Schindler, Colonel Erich Lange
Related Symbols: Lists
Page Number: 311
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 37 Quotes

To call either of them a speech, however, is to demean their effect. what Oskar was instinctively attempting was to adjust reality, to alter the self-image of both the prisoners and the SS. Long before, with pertinacious certainty, he’d told a group of shift workers, Edith Liebgold among them, that they would last the war. He’d flourished the same gift for prophecy when he faced the women from Auschwitz, on their morning of arrival the previous November, and told them, “you’re safe now; you’re with me.” It can’t be ignored that in another age and condition, the Herr Direktor could have become a demagogue of the style of Huey Long of Louisiana or John Lang of Australia, whose gift was to convince the listeners that they and he were bonded together to avert by a whisker all the evil devised by other men.

Oskar’s birthday speech was delivered in German at night on the workshop floor to the assembled prisoners. An SS detachment had to be brought in to guard a gathering of that size, and the German civilian personnel were present as well. As Oskar began to speak, Poldek Pfefferberg felt the hairs on his lice stand to attention. He looked around at the mute faces of Schoenbrun and Fuchs, and of the SS men with their automatics. They will kill this man, he thought. And then everything will fall apart.

Related Characters: Oskar Schindler, Leopold (Poldek) Pfefferberg, Edith Liebgold
Related Symbols: Schindler’s Birthday
Page Number: 364
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Schindler’s List LitChart as a printable PDF.
Schindler’s List PDF

SS Term Timeline in Schindler’s List

The timeline below shows where the term SS appears in Schindler’s List. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Prologue
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...on accordion. Seated at Goeth’s table are some Nazis, including Julian Scherner (head of the SS for Cracow) and Rolf Czurda (chief of a security branch in Cracow). The oldest at... (full context)
Chapter 1
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...necessarily disapprove of Germany’s invasion of Poland. His real problem is with Himmler and the SS, and he seems to believe that Gebauer and his Abwehr colleagues are preferable. (full context)
Chapter 2
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...because he knows reporting the bookkeeper to the Schutzpolizei will get him sent to the SS jail. Aue is himself vulnerable because his grandmother was Jewish. He sends a message to... (full context)
Chapter 4
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...in Lublin or even Madagascar. At the time, however, even Schindler and many in the SS didn’t know that Madagascar would eventually be replaced by a much deadlier solution: the pesticide... (full context)
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As Schindler warned, the SS go through the streets of the Jewish neighborhoods and begin smashing and stealing things. The... (full context)
Chapter 5
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Toffel tells Schindler about how the SS have reserved the entire rail system for the transport of Jews. He is annoyed because... (full context)
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...see Madagascar, as many have promised. Though he is a Nazi, he dislikes how the SS do things. Schindler once saw Gebauer hand over forged papers to help a Jewish businessman... (full context)
Chapter 6
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Schindler begins to become frustrated by the way SS squads detain his Jewish workers, saying it affects his factory’s productivity. He complains about this... (full context)
Chapter 7
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...at one point they play for a rich party that includes Nazis. Afterwards, a middle-aged SS officer approaches them and says, “I hope you have a nice harvest holiday.” They realize... (full context)
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...as possible. In particular he bribes a man named Reichert, who has contacts in the SS. Eventually, the scheme is found out, and both Biberstein and Reichert are jailed. Schindler says... (full context)
Chapter 8
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...on rations. Instead, the factory owners will have to pay a daily fee to the SS economic office. Schindler and Madritsch are both uncomfortable about this because if Germany loses the... (full context)
Chapter 10
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...Jewish ghetto police, by trying to portray the role as one of public service. The SS, meanwhile, see the OD as just another arm of the police force that will take... (full context)
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...of the ghetto has been handed down from Governor Frank to Julian Scherner, a middle-aged SS officer who looks like a standard bureaucrat (and whom Schindler has met at cocktail parties).... (full context)
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As the OD becomes increasingly controlled by the SS (and therefore more repressive), Pfefferberg starts looking for a way out. He finds a doctor... (full context)
Chapter 12
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...part of the ghetto. The child is no longer safe in the countryside since the SS are offering rewards to people who betray their Jewish neighbors. Mrs. Dresner tells the girl... (full context)
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A handsome SS officer is the only other man in the cell with Schindler, who suspects the man... (full context)
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Schindler tries to bribe a low-ranking SS officer guard to get five bottles of vodka. The guard is surprised, but Schindler assures... (full context)
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Philip worries that Schindler will get himself shot for attempted bribery, but when the SS officer comes back, he has two bottles for them, as well as various other amenities... (full context)
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On the fifth morning, another low-ranking SS officer and two guards come for Schindler. They take him to an office where he... (full context)
Chapter 14
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...headed to a labor camp near Lublin. Schindler goes around yelling Bankier’s name. A young SS man informs him that everyone in the depot is on a list, and that there’s... (full context)
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Schindler speaks to a superior SS officer. He asks for the officers name, because he wants to take the issue of... (full context)
Chapter 15
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...be a girl. The guards continue to lead the line of women and children while SS teams with dogs work both sides of the street. Schindler can’t believe the brutality that’s... (full context)
Chapter 16
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...Luftwaffe base, but she is still vulnerable to being taken away to a camp. When SS soldiers come to her neighborhood, Mrs. Dresner takes Danka next door to a neighbor with... (full context)
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...boy goes outside and says that no one is home at the house. Eventually, the SS men take his word and move on. Mrs. Dresner seems to be safe, but she... (full context)
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A Jewish resistance group uses stolen SS uniforms to plant a bomb in a restaurant, killing seven SS men and wounding 40... (full context)
Chapter 17
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...jeweler who is visited one night by one of Spira’s OD. He’s told that the SS urgently need four jewelers. Wulkan is taken to the SS Economic and Administrative Office, where... (full context)
Chapter 18
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...of them were sent to Vernichtungslagers, or extermination camps. Springmann and Kastner asks if the SS men are as corruptible as other police forces, and Schindler replies that in his experience,... (full context)
Chapter 19
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...by freight train, already anticipating what will happen the ghetto will soon be closed. An SS Untersturmführer named Amon Goeth is going to bring about the closure and take command of... (full context)
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...period fades, and one rumor has it that he sometimes sexually abuses inferiors in the SS. (full context)
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...camp is still in the construction process and looks unfinished to Goeth, but a low-ranking SS officer named Horst Pilarzik (who has a reputation for clearing 7,000 people out of the... (full context)
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...Goeth had ordered an execution in front of his men that very morning. The lower-ranking SS officer Hujar had been in a disagreement with a Jewish woman about a flaw in... (full context)
Chapter 21
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Pfefferberg and his wife, Mila, are in their home waiting to be caught by the SS and ordered into the street. They keep waiting, but nothing comes for them. Eventually the... (full context)
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...where he has a view out on the street. There, he witnesses atrocities, like the SS men with dogs who murder a two- or three-year-old child by throwing her against a... (full context)
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Pfefferberg approaches some SS men confidently as if he’s a soldier, saying he received an order to clear the... (full context)
Chapter 22
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...despite ostensibly being a work camp, it is a place of execution as well. The SS make no effort to hide these executions, suggesting that all in the camp are planned... (full context)
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...he can find the space. Goeth enthusiastically approves the idea, on the condition that the SS generals also approve. The next day, a meeting is arranged with Scherner. Goeth and Scherner... (full context)
Chapter 23
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...to Płaszów, the Emalia camp is peaceful, with no permanent guards. The rotating groups of SS and Ukrainians on guard like the assignment because they get better food there than anywhere... (full context)
Chapter 24
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...as well as Schindler himself, claim that Goeth was among them. While visiting, a young SS officer named Grün (a bodyguard to Goeth) sees a prisoner named Lamus pushing a barrow... (full context)
Chapter 26
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...loaves of bread. Because after the war he is viewed as a traitor by former SS men (who secretly organize in a group called ODESSA), he hides his film by burying... (full context)
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Other romantic attachments sometimes form in the camp. In one case, the SS officer Hujar falls in love with a Jewish prisoner. When Goeth finds out, he orders... (full context)
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...after only 10 minutes, the barracks lights come on, and one of the most fearsome SS officers comes through. Bau fears that the officer knows he’s missing and is looking for... (full context)
Chapter 29
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...proceeds to call a fire brigade that hoses down every car. He even bribes an SS official to open the cattle car doors when the train stops at stations (Two survivors... (full context)
Chapter 31
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Senior SS investigator Eckert looks through Goeth’s financial dealings, looking for black market deals and embezzlement, as... (full context)
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Pfefferberg hears about the list from an SS officer named Hans Schreiber, who has a nasty reputation but who takes a liking to... (full context)
Chapter 32
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...issued striped uniforms, and crowded into barracks. On the second day in the camp, an SS officer approaches Goldberg, saying that Schindler’s list hasn’t come in from Płaszów. Goldberg has to... (full context)
Chapter 33
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...own expense. Among his expenses are all the facilities he has to provide for 100 SS personnel. Hassebroeck has also taken his own share of what he pleases from Schindler’s camp,... (full context)
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...a different route, however. When the women get out, they realize they are at Auschwitz-Birkenau. SS men and women sort the Płaszów women into different groups. They are stripped and led... (full context)
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...and running. The workers move at a leisurely pace, just fast enough to please the SS men watching, sensing that Schindler has no real intention of contributing to the war effort.... (full context)
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One hopeful bit of news is that the SS men guarding Schindler’s factory seem to be middle-aged men who are content to lead a... (full context)
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...and confirms for him that Klonowska is rallying his old friends. A panel of 12 SS investigators interrogates Schindler the next day. They ask if he ever gave Goeth money to... (full context)
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The SS officer taking the men and children is surprisingly polite—he tells them that after he takes... (full context)
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...They’re marched to a large gate in front of a factory, with a crowd of SS men in front of it. Though they fear the worst, they notice Schindler among the... (full context)
Chapter 34
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...welders climb up to work near a water tank and find Schindler and a blond SS girl both naked in it. (full context)
Chapter 36
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...advances comes in, Henigman and the other survivors of the march are taken to an SS compound. There, he is surprised to be put in a railway car with 30 others... (full context)
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...step further by buying a plot for a Jewish cemetery. He even pays a middle-aged SS officer a small sum to keep the burial area well-maintained. (full context)
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During Goeth’s visit, he corners his old typist Pemper, having heard the SS officials were interrogating Pemper in relation to his work with Goeth. Pemper refuses to tell... (full context)
Chapter 37
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...then. We have to say goodbye to Untersturmführer Liepold.” They know Liepold is the only SS man in the camp who is fanatical enough to calmly order the death of 1,300... (full context)
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On his birthday, Schindler makes a speech promising the prisoners continued life. SS officers and German civilian personnel are present for the speech, and some, like Pfefferberg, worry... (full context)
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Within two days of Schindler’s birthday, Liepold gets orders transferring him to an SS infantry battalion near Prague. He goes without raising any complaints, and because Liepold used to... (full context)
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...charade that he’s running a business and blasting Churchill’s victory speech throughout the camp. The SS in the camp aren’t sure what to do, but a sense of duty keeps them... (full context)
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Parts of Schindler’s speech are directed to the SS garrison. He invites them to leave and asks the prisoners to let them. Schindler talks... (full context)
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After touching on several themes, Schindler finally thanks the SS garrison for being so humane, despite what they were asked to do. Some prisoners are... (full context)
Chapter 38
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After Schindler’s speech, the SS garrison begins to desert. The Budzyn people and other prisoners have already been issued weapons,... (full context)
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After the SS leave, all that remains in Brinnlitz is a German Kapo with a deadly reputation. Some... (full context)
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...remaining in Brinnlitz hang false signs about a typhus breakout to hopefully keep any lingering SS out. Some Czech partisans show up at the gate and say the prisoners are free... (full context)
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That night, a party of SS men on motorcycles pulls up at the gate asking for gasoline. Though some prisoners are... (full context)