Nice try. You tried to attribute it to Spielberg because he's a known name, and born to a jewish family.
Only true if A) his efforts have helped bring the holocaust to public awareness, which is not true and B) the holocaust is a hoax, which you have so far failed to establish.
Well, I would argue that through several documentaries Spielberg has been an active part in holocaust awareness, and having a major motion picture may have reached a few people who were only dimly aware of that history.
The major complaints about "Schindler's List" that I find are from within the remembrance community, and the general tone of them is between "how can someone born after the war understand what it was really like" to "It wasn't really like that." And some details are clearly wrong and there are a few of the usual mutters about plagiarism.
Which, for a historical drama, is small change indeed! Unless someone here thinks "Braveheart" is embraced by both historians and Scottish nationalists...
The worst you can say is that it is Hollywood History -- slanted, glamorized, but still based on something that actually happened.