The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Steven Spielberg on why Schindler’s List is relevant on its 25th anniversar­y

- By Eli Rosenberg

STEVEN Spielberg’s “Schindler’s List” is back in the theatre to mark the 25th anniversar­y of its release.

And the director said that it couldn’t come at a more appropriat­e time, saying that “there is more at stake today than even back then.”

“I think it’s just that hate is less parentheti­cal today and more of a headline,” Spielberg said in an interview this week with NBC News. “Individual hate is a terrible thing but when collective hate organises, then genocide follows. And that hate is not something that is not to be taken seriously. We have to take it more seriously today than I think we have had to take it in a generation.”

Host Lester Holt cited the shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh in which 12 congregant­s were killed. Spielberg, 71, added xenophobia and racism to the list of current concerns.

Schindler’s list, which released in December 1993, is back in select theatres this week.

The film tells the story of Oskar Schindler, a German industrial­ist who helped save more than 1,000 people by putting them to work at his factory.

It was responsibl­e for Spielberg’s first academy award for best director, part of a haul of seven it won that included best picture. And it was a commercial success as well, which Spielberg told Holt he was surprised by.

“I couldn’t imagine based on the story that we told that an audience would tolerate just the amount of violence, human against human. Or inhuman against human,” Spielberg told Holt. “No one thought the film was going to

I think it’s just that hate is less parentheti­cal today and more of a headline. Steven Spielberg, director

make any money.”

Working on the film gave Spielberg the idea for the Shoah Institute, which is housed at the University of Southern California. Founded in 1994 to preserve video and interviews with Holocaust survivors and witnesses, it has expanded to documentin­g testimonie­s about other genocides. Spielberg told the story to Holt, talking about how they had worked with Holocaust survivors and people who were helped by Schindler.

One of the people was a little girl at the time, whom Schindler was sent to prison for kissing.

“She came over to watch a shoot, and she came over to me and she said, ‘I want to tell you my story,’” Spielberg said. “I said, ‘I’m telling your story.’ She said, ‘Oh that’s nothing that was a tiny part of my life. I want to tell you my entire story of what my life was like, who I am. I want you to see me, to tell my story so that story can inform everybody about what happened to me and others like me.’” Spielberg told Holt that of all his works, he was proudest of the film.

“I don’t think I’ll ever do anything as important,” he said. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Spielberg arrives at the 90th Oscars Nominees Luncheon last Feb 5. — Reuters file photo
Spielberg arrives at the 90th Oscars Nominees Luncheon last Feb 5. — Reuters file photo

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