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  1. Apr 7, 2015 · It is November, 1940.160 Jewish children walk defiantly through the streets of Warsaw on their way to the ghetto.They wave flags and sing joyfully. As long a...

    • Apr 7, 2015
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    • AnnickPress
  2. Janusz Korczak (center) and Sabina Lejzerowicz (to his right) pose with children and younger staff in Korczak's orphanage in Warsaw, circa 1930-1939. Even as they were deported to their deaths at Treblinka in 1942, Korczak and his staff stayed by their children.

  3. Dec 24, 2014 · Henrik Goldszmit (Janusz Korczak) was born in Warsaw in 1878. Pediatrician, educator, and successful author, he abandoned his career in the private sector in 1912 to focus on orphanages. He chose to dedicate his life to children so they could be recognized and respected, no matter their situation and without religious affiliation.

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  5. www.holocausthistoricalsociety.org.uk › contentsHolocaust Historical Society

    Sep 13, 2023 · Janusz Korczak with children in his orphanage. Janusz Korczak was the pen name of Henryk Goldszmit born in 1878 or 1879, physician, writer and educator. He was born in Warsaw, the son of an assimilated Jewish famly. Korczak's father was a successful attorney who became mentally ill when Korczak was eleven. This was a heavy blow to the family's ...

  6. The final chapters of Lifton's book describe the Nazi occupation of Warsaw. By the end of November, 1940, the Jews of Warsaw had to move behind the walls of the ghetto and Korczak had to move the orphanage into new premises, at 33 Chlodna Street, also situated in the ghetto. Offers to obtain false identity papers and save himself were refused.

  7. Janusz Korczak was the founder and principle of two orphanages in Warsaw. During his lifetime he was both renowned and loved as a doctor, writer, educator and fighter for the rights of the child. He devoted his life to the needs and plight of children regardless of nationality and religion, even to the point of refusing to abandon his Jewish ...

  8. Here’s the very best of Janusz Korczak’s unorthodox wisdom on children (and adults) – encapsulated in his own words. Children are not future human beings, they are already human beings. It is humanity’s good fortune that we cannot force children to submit to their caregivers’ influences or ...

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