FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

(New York, NY, December 31, 2015) - Hailed by Pope John Paul II and
strongly

influential in the United Nations adoption of the Universal Declaration of
Human

Rights and the Rights of the Child, this doctor/educator/author’s brilliant
life, tragic

ending in the Holocaust and the enduring legacy of his ideas are vividly
presented in

Janusz Korczak: Sculptor of Children’s Souls (Child Development Research &

The Wordsmithy, LLC: $18.95, 234 pp., May, 2015, ISBN: 978-1-935110-19-4).

Although a bachelor with no children of his own, Korczak was a father to
thousands

of children via his stewardship of both a unique Jewish orphanage (Dom
Sierot) and

simultaneously a Catholic one (Nasz Dom) in early 20th Century Poland.
Although

he, his staff and his children were marched to their eventual death at
Treblinka, the

journey of his humanistic ideas has continued to march onwards.

An educator for over 40 years in the United States and Israel, Marcia
Talmage

Schneider has not only written a biography of Korczak (already the subject
of many

works and an award-winning film), but has also uniquely traced his legacy
through

first-hand interviews with 10 graduates of his Dom Sierot orphanage. His
“children”,

who range from photographers and artists to psychologists and educators,
illustrate

the lasting effects of Korczak’s philosophy and personality decades later.

What was it that made Korczak’s ideas so revolutionary? Talmage Schneider
notes:

“Heading the orphanage from 1912 to his end in 1942, Korczak’s methods

emphasized each child’s right to respect by creating a democracy of
children, for

children and by children.” Unlike similar institutions of the time, his was
self-
governed by a Court of Justice comprised of Korczak, his staff (including
the janitor!),

and the children themselves; rules of responsibilities for oneself and
others; a

newspaper written by the children, plus other humane ideas emanating from
his own

magical personality, partially forged by his experiences in two wars that
showed him

the effects of violence on children.

In his classic book “To Love A Child” (1919), Korczak wrote of children:
“Give them

the conditions for better development so that they can grow up to be adults
who will

bring a better future to the world.” This is why Pope John Paul II cited
him as “a

symbol of true religion and true morality” and why Poland declared 2012 The
Year of

Janus Korczak, marking the 70th Anniversary of his death and the 100th
Anniversary

of the founding of Dom Sierot. In a current movement to get Korczak’s ideas
better

known in Canada and to improve its welfare system, Irwin Elman, Ontario’s

Provincial Advocate for Children and Youth, recently stated on CBC Radio’s
“The

Current” that “It’s possible...you can create the conditions and legislate
the

conditions where love can flourish.”



As an innovative pediatrician, educator, radio personality and author (one
of whose

magical children’s books – Kaytek, the Wizard - anticipated the Harry
Potter series),

Korczak led the way with his loving and visionary methods. “Perhaps,” says

Talmage Schneider, “his methods would greatly benefit the world today.”

For further information, interviews, speaking engagements:

Contact:

Marcia Talmage Schneider

212- 662-7006

cell 347-380-3375

mahry...@verizon.net
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