That's fascinating about Schindler. It sounds like he slid into humanitarianism without any conscious intent. It sounds like he obeyed his conscience like some people obey an addiction or impulse. You say "his conscience gave him no choice." It's hard for me to think of that as courage. To me, courage is necessarily a choice. If in his mind, he did not make a choice, that sounds more like a victim or a slave. I'm not trying to draw a hard line here at all. I say it's hard for me to think of him as courageous, but at the same time, I think of him as a true hero. In the Spielberg movie, in his moment of triumph, he is distraught because "I could have saved so many more." That scene is so heart-rending to me. It says "to be good, you must suffer." It's like seeing a man crucify himself. I can't help but think there is something deep and essential about that in the human condition.