Ceremony tomorrow at Yad Vashem with
participation of Holocaust survivors and youth groups
(August 6, 2008 - Jerusalem)
Tomorrow, Thursday, August 7, 2008, Yad Vashem will mark
66 years since the deportation to Treblinka of Janusz Korczak,
Stefania Wilczynska, and the children of their orphanage, from
the Warsaw Ghetto. Survivors, members of the Korczak society,
and of the youth movements will participate in the memorial
ceremony at 17:00 at Janusz Korczak Square at Yad Vashem.
Prior to the ceremony, participants will meet at the Korczak
memorial in the Polish Jewry Forrest, and then visit the “My
Homeland: Holocaust Survivors in Israel” exhibit in Yad
Vashem’s Exhibitions Pavilion.
Janusz Korczak was the pen name of
Henryk Goldszmit, a Polish-born doctor, author and educator.
Born in Warsaw to an assimilated Jewish family, Korczak
dedicated his life to caring for children, particularly
orphans. He believed that children should always be listened
to and respected, and this belief was reflected in his work.
He wrote several books for and about children, and broadcast a
children's radio program. In 1912 Korczak became the director
of a Jewish orphanage in Warsaw. When World War II broke out
in 1939, Korczak first refused to accept the German occupation
and heed their regulations (consequently spending time in
jail). However, when the Jews of Warsaw were forced to move
into a ghetto, Korczak refocused his efforts on the children
in his orphanage. Despite offers from Polish friends to hide
him on the "Aryan" side of the city, Korczak refused to
abandon the children.
Stefania Wilczynska was born in
1886 in Poland and completed her studies at the University of
Liège, Belgium. In 1909, she met Korczak and the two began
working together. When World War I began, Korczak was
recruited and Stefania remained in charge of running the
orphanage, which had expanded and now housed some 150
children. In 1935, she visited Palestine and lived at Ein
Harod until 1939. With the Nazi occupation, the members of Ein
Harod arranged for her the possibility of leaving Poland, but
she turned it down and moved to the ghetto along with Dr.
Korczak and the children.
In August 1942, during a 2-month
wave of deportations from the ghetto, the Nazis rounded up
Korczak, Wilczynska and the 200 children of the orphanage.
They marched in rows to the Umschlagplatz with Korczak
in the lead. He and Stephania never abandoned the children,
even to the very end. Korczak and the children were sent to
Treblinka, where they were all murdered.