World | Oskar Schindler Schindler's List Found in Aussie Library List of saved Jews that inspired book was buried deep in box of author's papers By Rob Quinn Posted Apr 7, 2009 5:18 AM CDT Copied In this March 2009 photo released by the New South Wales State Library, author Thomas Keneally is seen with Schindlers List papers. (AP Photo/New South Wales State Library,Bruce York, HO) A rare copy of one of Oskar Schindler's original lists has been found in an Australian library, Reuters reports. The 13 yellowing pages list hundreds of Jews the German industrialist saved from the gas chambers by employing them in his factories. The list was given to Schindler's List author Thomas Kenneally by Los Angeles luggage shop owner Leopold Pfefferberg—whose name is No. 173 on the list—after a chance meeting in 1980. "The original list was hurriedly typed on 18 April 1945 in the closing days of WWII, and it saved 801 men from the gas chambers," said a curator at the Sydney library, who found the list buried deep in a box of Kenneally's research papers. "It's an incredibly moving piece of history." Read These Next A look at President Trump's fast pivot on Minneapolis. Treasury drops Booz Allen over Trump tax return leak. Minnesota judge makes an unusual move against the ICE chief. Sydney Sweeney is at the center of a controversy yet again. Report an error