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Monument to Janusz Korczak (Warsaw)

Year of unveiling

2006

Person/persons/event to whom the monument is dedicated

Monument dedicated to Janusz Korczak (1878-1942) - actually Henryk Goldszmit - a Polish-Jewish family doctor, social activist, educator and teacher.

Localization

Warsaw, Swietokrzyski Park

Location in relation to the surroundings

The monument is located in the Świętokrzyski Park between the Palace of Culture and Science and Świętokrzyska Street - near the place where the orphanage where Janusz Korczak worked was located.

Text of the inscription

JANUSZ KORCZAK
DR HENRYK GOLDSZMIT
1878-1942

General description

The monument shows a group of figures, Janusz Koraczak, surrounded by a group of children, his protégés, standing under a dead tree whose dry branches form a menorah - a seven-armed Jewish candlestick. The figures are made of bronze, a granite tree. The whole is on an artificial hill, covered with paving stones.

Condition

Good

The circumstances of unveiling

Janusz Korczak was a doctor and educator who was extremely strongly involved in work with and for children, a publicist and writer, author of, among others, the novel for children "King Matt I", and a social activist, co-creator of houses for Polish and Jewish orphans.

During the war he ran a house for Jewish orphans in the Warsaw Ghetto. After the ghetto was closed, he did not take the opportunity and decided not to leave it, explaining that he could not leave his charges. In 1942 the facility was liquidated and its employees and about 200 pupils were transported to the Treblinka concentration camp.

The initiative to build a monument to commemorate Korczak appeared just after the war. However, due to difficulties in raising funds, the works did not go beyond the stage of plans.

In 1999, on the initiative of Gołda Tencer, General Director of the Shalom Foundation and Prof. Jadwiga Bińczycka, President of the Janusz Korczak Polish Association, the issue of building a monument was revived. Many people from the worlds of art, science and politics took patronage of the initiative. Funds for the construction of the monument were raised by organizing charity concerts, art auctions and support from the city authorities. The design of the monument was selected as a result of an international contest, announced in 2001. The project by Bohdan Chmielewski and Zbigniew Wilma won. The cornerstone of the monument was placed in 2003 by the Mayor of Warsaw, Lech Kaczyński. The monument was unveiled in 2006, on June 1, on Children's Day. The ceremony was a state event, attended by the President of the Republic of Poland Lech Kaczyński and the President of the Polish Janusz Korczak Association Prof. Jadwiga Bińczycka, Rabbi Michael Schudrich and the General Director of the Shalom Foundation Gołda Tencer.

The monument was erected at the site of a house for Jewish orphans, from which Janusz Korczak set off on his journey to the concentration camp with his pupils.

Later history

Contemporary importance

There are several monuments commemorating Janusz Korczak in Warsaw itself, the best known of which is the one located in the Jewish cemetery on Okopowa Street, which serves as his symbolic grave. However, the monument set up in the Świętokrzyski Park is not only the largest but also, due to its very convenient location, the most frequently visited by school trips and tourists monument commemorating Janusz Korczak. Every year, around June 1st, on Children's Day, trips from Warsaw schools go to the monument.

Localization