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Janusz Korczak with the orchestra of the children’s home in
Warsaw |
This
exhibition derives its name from an excerpt from Janusz Korczak’s “Rules
of Life”, A Childhood of Dignity:
“
It is not proper to be ashamed of any game. This is no child’s
play.
It is wrong for adults to say - and for the more intelligent of the
children to repeat after them
‘Such
a big boy and he plays like a baby; such a big girl and she still
plays with dolls.’
What
matters is not what one plays with, but rather how and what one
thinks and feels while playing.
One
can play wisely with a doll or play childishly and foolishly at
chess.
One
can play with great interest and imagination at being a policeman,
making a train, being a hunter or an Indian, and one can read books
without any thought or interest.”
“In
embarking upon research for this exhibition, we thought that our
findings would be limited to the children’s moments of comfort or
consolation. Now we have learned that far more was involved.
Fantasy, creativity, and play were the manifestations of a basic
instinct for survival, a prerequisite for life in this context.
Korczak’s claim “No Child’s Play” has been proven
irrefutably correct.” (Yehudit Inbar, Curator)
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