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Reviews for When I am little again; and, The child's right to respect

 When I am little again magazine reviews

The average rating for When I am little again; and, The child's right to respect based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2009-04-14 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Robin J Mikels
UPDATE 12/13/18 ... I'm reading parts of this again as I get to the point in my novel when Korczak and his children marched off to die at Treblinka. A horrifying story told with power and emotion. In case you need any more reason to hate the Germans, this is it. *** There are many tears to be shed for the way Janusz Korczak died, marching at the head of his final group of orphans off to a German death camp, but one cannot fail to be thrilled by the way he lived. For 30 years, he ran an orphanage in Warsaw, out of love for the children he was able to care for and as a means to study what worked and what didn't in the interaction with children. His ideas - a court system run by the children, a newspaper written and largely managed by the children - are astonishingly on target, even today. Betty Lifton did a superb job of capturing the emotion and the quality of Korczak's work. I have already written one scene in my novel-in-progress where Anna Gorska (my main fictional Polish character) shares a pre-Hanukah play session at the orphanage, and I have now outlined another 3-4 scenes involving Korczak and the children that I think will help me communicate the great richness of the world of Polish Jewry, the memory of which has survived even the German attempt to eradicate it. Here are some of my notes ... ... children's court … not an instant success … children did not want to tattle … finally got going … counselors as prosecutor and defense attorney; three children as judges .. any child could bring a suit against another child … Korczak learning as he watched ... using the orphanage as a laboratory, Korczak wanted to work out an educational diagnostic system … children to run their own parliament, court and newspaper … a moral education based on respect for others as a prelude to self-respect ... Korczak launched an orphanage newspaper … each Saturday, he would read aloud his special column of the week … "do you remember, when you first came here, you didn't have any friends, and you felt sad and lonely" Korczak's books, fiction and non-fiction, are all worth reading, especially these ... King Matt the First ...Kaytek the Wizard ... Loving Every Child: Wisdom for Parents
Review # 2 was written on 2016-03-23 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Joshua Nelson
One of the most beautiful biographies to come out of the Holocaust, and probably one of the most inspiring Poles, Janusz Korczak's story is a must read. He was a champion of human rights for children, and his story of self sacrifice is a little known story to the western world. To get the full holocaust spectrum I recommend: Man's Search for Meaning, by Viktor Frankl Night, by Elie Weisel If This is a Man and The Truce, By Primo Levi I Never Saw Another Butterfly, play by Celeste Raspanti, Picture book and Poems arranged by Hana Volavkova


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