The protagonist in "Schindler's List" is the German Schindler. He is a great man. I bring you a few thoughts after watching "Schindler's List" for your reading. Below is the content I compiled for you, I hope you like it.
Reflections after watching "Schindler's List"
To be honest, I don't like reading foreign books and classics. Maybe it's due to the cultural differences between China and the West. , reading foreign books always feels difficult to understand and even a bit boring. The teacher said that it was normal not to be able to read. If you want to understand, you must first read foreign Bibles. I could only surrender to this. It is said that music has no borders, and I firmly believe that good books do too. There are many celebrities abroad who are worthy of our learning and admiration.
I still remember that a year ago, the teacher took us to watch the movie "Schindler's List". After watching the more than three hours of film, it gave me deep thoughts. Thinking about it now makes me feel heartbroken, and I never want to watch it again. This is a film that profoundly exposes the horrific crimes committed by the German Nazis in the massacre of Jews. The film shows the true history of World War II in a black and white documentary format. For students like me, I have gained more experience in this kind of war era, that is, war can bring out the ugliest side of human beings, but it can also see the bright and hopeful side of people. When it is dark enough, people will It is indeed the truth to be able to see the stars. The crazy killings of the fascists and Schindler, a profit-seeking businessman who spent all his property to save the persecuted Jews, form the comparative clues of the whole film. The whole movie made me have the urge to cry. At the end, Schindler said sadly when he was escaping: "How many more people can I save? What makes it difficult for me to understand is why humans persecute each other by race, rather than killing animals." Still cold?
I like Schindler’s definition of power: What is power? Power is not the ability to condemn people to death. Power is only when you have the potential to pardon and save people who are destined to die! I really thank Schindler, Schindler saw a little girl in red walking through atrocities and massacres almost unscathed among the stormtroopers wielding clubs and shooting wildly and the driven Jews. When the little girl reappeared, she It was already a corpse on the corpse truck. Schindler was greatly shocked, and so were we. Not only was the little girl's dress a rare color in this movie, but more importantly, it made me see something. This light of humanity is quietly burning, and this may be the turning point for Schindler to put aside his interests to save the Jews from persecution.
The names on Schindler's list are life, not the dead, just like in the film. As said in: "This is not an ordinary list, this list is life. Every name was exchanged for a huge amount of money. Schindler gave up many, many things of his own to protect a group of lives and a nation!
When I watched this movie, I felt I wonder if I would be so great if I were Schindler, and if I were Gott, would I be so cruel, but due to the cowardice of human nature, I have never and dare not imagine what I would do if I were a Jew at that time. How will you live and how will you die? I would rather be anyone than them, precisely because of their tragedy and my cowardice. So I was probably just a blank bystander at the time.
The biggest feature of this movie is not to educate us, but to have something that makes people wary. What it warns against is not certain habits or conduct of people, but human nature. I also don’t want to point out the tragic fate of a certain Jew in the movie to win people’s admiration, so that they agree with me, because as far as a certain Jew is concerned, there is no other innocent person who deserves to be tortured and killed.
When faced with crematoria, gas chambers, and the fearful and questioning eyes of Jews, you can never remain indifferent.
Reflections after watching "Schindler's List" 2
I watched "Schindler's List" in the classroom and it touched me greatly. Later I watched it again in the dormitory. Once, there were so many things about this three-hour movie that shocked me to the core.
We have all seen many movies depicting World War II, but if we were asked to find the most classic in our memory, "Schindler's List" must be among them. This is a majestic and great movie. In this movie, I can strongly feel the weight of life! Saving one person is saving the whole world!
In the whole movie, I feel the most What was shocking was not the brutality of the corpse-burning scene, nor the panic and despair in the gas chambers, but a relatively ordinary morning. This morning, a group of poor Jews were working like cattle and horses in the power grid of a German military area. And what about the governor of the district, Gefu? He was standing bare-chested on the balcony outside his bedroom, stretching his back and leisurely looking down at the Jews under his command. In the bedroom behind him, his girl was sleeping soundly. After stretching his muscles, Graf slowly walked back into the house, picked up a sniper, and aimed his sniper at the Jews who were working a little slowly in the distance, killing them one by one. He tilted his head, holding a cigarette in his mouth, with a calm expression. Every sound disturbed the girl's sleep. She tried her best to keep her ears out of the sound, but she failed, so she felt extremely uncomfortable. The sound disturbed her sleep, and she felt extremely uncomfortable. This was by no means an emergency, but part of their daily lives. Killing no longer has any excitement in their minds, and this extraordinary event has been regarded as normal by them. This, I feel, is a hundred times more sinful than the killing itself.
Where there is war, there are heroes. Life in the concentration camps was as cheap as animals, being trampled on at will. The plight of the Jews is lamentable, and the painful cost of the war is unbearable. Human nature is confused in the war. As Schindler said, war will only highlight the ugly side of human nature. We have also seen the Nazi soldiers' disregard for life and the wanton killing of innocent Polish Jews. Fortunately, we also see that the ruthlessness of war inspired the kind side of Schindler's humanity. He used his clever mind to obtain huge income with cheap labor during the war, and was a representative of cold-blooded capitalists. However, he still had a conscience and saved the Jews time and time again and brought them into his sanctuary.
At the end of the film, when he received a gold ring given to him by the surviving Jews, with Hebrew words on it: Saving a person is saving a world, Mr. Schindler collapsed emotionally. He had always thought that The sense of righteous victory that he had already done well was defeated by his weakness and frustration. He pointed to his car and said that it could be exchanged for 10 people with Officer Goethe, and pointed to his brooch, indicating that it could be exchanged for 2 people, or even more. many. He burst into tears and complained that he was not working hard enough and could not make more money, so that he could save only more than 1,100 Jewish people. That scene really moved me. Before going bankrupt and about to embark on the road to exile, Mr. Schindler finally showed his great side. I am sure that he has great love for all innocent humans. At that moment, I really wanted to cry. A truly great person is never proud of his own achievements, but still examines his own shortcomings and calls them sins. In fact, just like the motto on the ring, Mr. Schindler was the brightest light in those darkest days. Every name on Schindler's List is the weight of life!
Reflections on "Schindler's List" 3
Quietly, three hours of silence It slipped away quietly and peacefully, but my heart could never be at peace.
When I first watched "Schindler's List", I was not very confused as to why the pictures shot in 1993 were in black and white. Not only did I have to endure the slow and heavy narrative, but I also had to endure the monotonous black and white. Later I realized that black represents darkness and white represents sunshine; black represents despair and white represents hope; black represents sin and white represents kindness. Or maybe only black and white can symbolize that era. The background of this film is the tragic events of the Nazi massacre of Jews in Germany during World War II. Schindler, an Austrian businessman, didn't have a good impression of him at first. He was greedy for money and lust. He took advantage of the German war period to force Jewish businessmen to invest. Then he and the Jewish accountant Stern hired cheap Jews to make enamel utensils and sold them, making a huge profit. money. But later when he witnessed the mass murder of Jews, he began to rethink the meaning of human existence.
In the name of the large amount of labor required to produce arms, he used the money earned during the war to buy out the Jews who would surely suffer the fate of the concentration camps. Pfeifferburg and Fisher Schindler's List saved more than 1,100 Jews. The war was over, the workers gained the freedom to live, but Schindler was bankrupt and had to flee for being a "war criminal." But he never regretted it, but regretted that he did not save more people. Seeing this, I couldn't help but feel ashamed for my previous thoughts. I once heard a geography teacher say that Jews are smart and hard-working, and their achievements in various fields around the world have attracted the world's attention. Even their faces are very beautiful. The girls' big, deep eyes always shine with gentleness and wisdom. The strong contrast between the strength and optimism shown by the Jews in the face of tragic situations and the Nazi officers forgetting themselves in the killing made me have to think? What is it that can kill the same kind of people like this, and what about the Jews who are in a weak situation? Struggling with little hope and witnessing the claws of death reaching out to them, the fear of death gradually faded away, but the humanity trampled by the Nazi officers and the despair caused by the Jews made me even more profound. Through this movie, Schindler's selfless act of rescue, the tenacity and optimistic nature of the Jews, and the cruelty of the Nazi officers are all vividly visible, as if they have returned to that dark era that was unbearable to witness.
To quote from thousands of viewers: The touching quality of this movie does not lie in its plot, but in its ability to arouse the conscience of all viewers.
Four thoughts after watching "Schindler's List"
The film is based on a true story and tells the heavy history of Nazi Germany's large-scale enslavement and massacre of Jews during World War II.
When the Jews were driven to the ghetto, the Nazis on the streets shouted: "Get out! Damn the Jews!" Through the black and white video, I saw the light in the eyes of the Jewish children gradually Gloomy, they knew that what awaited them would be endless suffering and torture. I can't imagine that when they were still so young, their yearning and longing for beauty were ravaged like this; just like this black and white picture, it was so depressing and suffocating. The Nazis' dark rule over the Jews made the Jews completely their slaves. Cheap labor became the only option for the Jews to survive. Later, a character appeared in the movie, Gott, who regarded killing Jews as fun. There was no mercy or forgiveness in his eyes. All he had left was rejection, killing and unspeakable violence.
I still remember his Jewish maid Helen said: "I can't figure out his moods and sorrows. I dare not get close to him. I feel that he may kill me at any time." I still remember her Eyes full of tears, fearful eyes and trembling body washing my heart like a storm?
What impressed me most was a little girl in a red coat among a group of fleeing Jews. , she is the only bright red color in this film. She is innocent, lively and cute, jumping around looking for a place to take refuge. This scene happened to be seen by Schindler, maybe he was shocked by the girl in red, his His eyes refused to leave for a long time. The girl was hiding under a sofa. She lay quietly and smiled. But when I saw this, my heart hurt like a knife. She looked like an angel! But I had no idea that the devil's clutches would eventually reach out to her. Later, when the girl in red appeared again, it was on the corpse truck. Her red coat was still very bright, but it was no longer hope, but a cinnabar mole in our hearts.
The protagonist of the movie, Schindler, was born into a wealthy German family. He has a good family background and knows how to enjoy a good life. Later, due to the Great Depression, his family was in ruins, so he came to Krakow to look for opportunities to make a fortune. He had good communication skills and was eloquent. He relied on blackmail to get wealthy Jewish businessmen to invest in him. He was good at dancing and obtained official contracts by bribing German officers. The empty-handed white wolf developed from empty-handed to a rich man and a good friend of the military in a short period of time. His original intention was to make a fortune, but as the plot developed, he witnessed the brutal atrocities of the Nazis and saw the Jews being trampled and killed wantonly. Instead of choosing to be indifferent and evading, he cleverly came to help.
He used superb diplomacy to bribe the military, allowing Jews to work in factories, allowing them to briefly escape the hell of the concentration camp; he found an excuse to test fire hoses and brought water of life to the hungry Jews in the train; he comforted the miserable and desperate people. Maid; advising the murderous officers to adopt a forgiving management style; and finally creating a list that shines with the glory of humanity. He did not hesitate to spend his money, put himself in danger, and protect the Jews who were strangers to him. The brilliance of humanity is released layer by layer in him.
"First-class wisdom is always self-contradictory" is perfectly demonstrated in Schindler. He is selfish and indulgent, but he also adheres to the moral bottom line of kindness and demonstrates the brilliance of human nature. This is A real person, a perfect person. He is not a good student in the traditional sense, but at a critical moment he chose to do something that did not benefit his personal interests but was right.
War can reveal a person’s ugly face, and it can also show a person’s shining side. After seeing the plight of the Jews, Schindler used most of his property in exchange for the lives of the Jews. There were more than 1,100 names printed on his list. This was not only a list, but also a living life. !Schindler gave up a lot of things, but protected a group of lives and a nation!
When the Jews became free people, they used the only gold they had to make a ring for Schindler, with the following words engraved on it: : "When you save one person, you save a world."
This is Schindler's own redemption. His good deeds enabled more than a thousand people to survive. Presumably, this is the brilliance of humanity, the only shining light I see of the Nazis in this film. I often think, if I were Schindler, would I devote all my life to saving the Jews? If I were Gott, would I massacre them ruthlessly? Or if I were a Jew of that period, would I be able to endure the refugee crisis? Hiding in a cesspool? Can I not be afraid of death? How should I survive and how should I die? I can't know, because of my cowardice, because I don't have the courage to face it, let alone how to choose. Therefore, I can only be a spectator and praise Schindler's glory. I am angry at Gott's cruelty, feel sorry for the innocent Jews who were killed, and bless the surviving Jews.
To this day, what is unforgettable is that heavy list, and what is even more vivid is the girl in red who shuttles among the crowd in the black and white picture. She is the hottest flame and the darkest in people's hearts. corner.
Five thoughts after watching "Schindler's List"
After watching "Schindler's List", tears kept falling again, even though it was not the first time. But there is still a worrying feeling. Looking at the black-and-white images that symbolize the tragic fate of the Jews, and listening to the extremely incongruous sounds mixed with the crystal-clear hymns of Jewish children, the entire film silently displays that sad past. Especially the contrast between the little girl in red walking ignorantly through the crowd and her appearance on the corpse truck again is even more sad. The Jewish nation has encountered a dark history. During the Third Reich under Hitler, according to rough statistics, approximately 6 million Jews and tens of millions of others were killed as a result of Hitler's genocidal policies. Every time I read about that period of history, I feel an inexplicable fear. But this fear does not come from the large-scale massacre itself, but that the massacre is carried out under an extremely orderly organization, although the massacre is indeed a terrifying nightmare for humans. Not only was the killing done in an assembly-line manner, but all the processes from sorting out Jews to sending them to concentration camps were the result of machines operating at high efficiency. And the saddest thing is that every certificate that sent a Jew to the death factory had a judge's permission.
No matter from which angle you look at it, the judicial organs during the Nazi period could not escape the stain of aiding the evildoers. Because all the Nazi laws that brutally treated the Jews were successfully implemented in the operation of the judicial organs. Some people may argue that because German judges have received strict training in positivist jurisprudence, they can only strictly enforce the law, even if it goes against their nature.
However, in reality, Germany often applies laws across the boundaries of statutory law. For example, in April 1939, the Frankfurt district sentenced the Jewish art dealer Max, who only glanced at a German girl, for the crime of "insulting and causing harm in public." The insult was only caused by looking at the girl. The composition at a glance goes far beyond the definition of insult in its judicial basis, the "Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor". Some people may also argue that under the ideological propaganda of the Nazis, they cannot identify such laws as unjust and evil laws, and they cannot refuse to apply laws that violate justice, because there is no way for them to ignore the danger of persecution and proceed without hesitation. environment for a fair trial. It is undeniable that in many cases, the situation is indeed stronger than the person, and we have no choice but to act against our will. However, this reason can be used for ordinary Germans, but it cannot erase the stain on the judiciary. Indeed, the Nazi legal theory based on eugenics at that time had sufficient reasons for the massacre, but the judiciary, as the guardian of justice, forgot the most important point? Respect for human individuals, the ultimate value goal of this law . Under power, it may be impossible to reject unjust laws, but at least you can escape, or at least you can choose not to join in. Knowing clearly that the Nazis were committing massacre, but still aiding them, is worse than directly killing people. No matter what the high-sounding reasons are, even if you are enforcing the actual law as a law enforcer, you will still have to bear responsibility and accept sanctions in the end.
The respect for life and respect for each individual Jew shown by the protagonist Schindler in the film to rescue the Jews was the most important thing for the judicial organs in the trials throughout the Nazi rule. Absentees. Due to the eugenics theory advocated by the Nazis and the background of the war, assimilation was inevitable. But even Amon, who likes to use the Jews in the concentration camp as live targets in the film, can still feel some warmth from many subtle plots such as saying "thank you" to the Jewish maid and "I don't want to pass the cold to you." The most ironic thing is that the Nazi judicial decisions did not even contain this minimal human warmth, but only coldness and indifference, not only towards the Jews, but also towards all so-called inferior ethnic groups such as the Poles. The most ironic case that struck me occurred on February 18, 1943. 14 Polish farmers were charged with "illegal slaughter" for slaughtering their own pigs. 9 of them were sent to concentration camps and 3 of them were sentenced to death. The judicial logic of this case turned out to be that human life is worth less than pig life. As long as the judge in this case had a little respect for human life, even if it was just mercy, how could there be such a ridiculous verdict? After all, the effects of passive enforcement and active enforcement of evil laws are very different. The Nazi judges were terrifying because of their indifference and contempt for the lives of the weak under the knife. It is this indifference that makes the judge's black robe no longer a symbol of the guardian, but a part of the terrifying shadow.
Respect for each individual person is not only a humanistic spirit and a kind of humanistic care, but also has a special meaning for legal professionals. Because whether it is poetry or justice, it must ultimately be reflected in each individual person, and even the entire judicial system cannot be established without its application to individual people. If these beautiful dreams of fairness, justice, and democracy were separated from people, they would be nothing more than abstract vocabulary symbols. The law may seem cold and impersonal, but that kind of respect for people permeates the spirit of the law, which began in ancient Greece thousands of years ago. It is out of this respect that we have the famous saying in the British Magna Carta that "the wind can enter, the rain can enter, but the king cannot enter", the story of William I and the mill, and the building built with the separation of the three powers. Only with the dam of power can we have the criminal law principle of "presumption of innocence" and the practice of emphasizing procedure over substance? From Socrates to Plato, from Berlin to Dworkin, from ancient Greece to postmodernity, from nature From legal schools to feminist jurisprudence, this respect is manifested intentionally or unintentionally in the lines of different doctrines of various schools of thought over thousands of years. I have been studying law for two years, and I feel that the most similar thing between me and ordinary people is not the legal knowledge I have learned, but the spirit of the law I feel? Equality, respect, and tolerance.
I think that for a qualified judicial officer, the most important thing is not the depth of legal knowledge and proficiency in skills, but a kind of respect from the heart and respect for all parties encountered in judicial practice. If all judicial officials could uphold this attitude, at least there would not be so many tragedies involving torture to extract confessions.
The brilliance of humanity in "Schindler's List" reflects the horror of justice during the Nazi period, reminding us that we must use love and respect for life to dispel the shadows under the black robes of those judges. This is not only true for bad laws, but also for excellent legal systems, because respecting the value of each individual is respecting the law itself. Judges who lack this kind of respect are very likely to turn a well-formulated law into a "bad law" in execution. Maybe this movie is not about law, but the weight of that period of history tightly grasps our hearts through the black and white images, arouses our desire and hope for justice, and awakens the same people as Schindler. feelings. As former U.S. President Clinton said, ""Schindler's List" has an artistic effect that reviews history and is thought-provoking. I urge you to go see this film." I hope more people can be like me. I was moved by "Schindler's List" and respected everyone like Schindler.