Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Differences

Moral actions do positively contribute to a society. This means that when a person makes a choice to do their right thing with their actions society is a better place. Janusz Korczak, a Jewish doctor writer and educator, was a person who when Jewish lives were threatened made the difficult moral choice to ignore his own chance to live and instead chose to remain with the Jewish children in his care. Korczak became a hero for countless Jews and others because he demonstrates the traits of selflessness, compassion, reliability.He was a man who helped and cared deeply about children.. Korczak was known by people from his orphanage and what he did about it. A man that did something no one else would have done in this time. A man that chose to die with the children.

Janusz Korczak to me is a man who is the most selfless person I have ever known. Korczak demonstrates him being selfless from what he did with his life one of the things he did was trying to join the Polish army. He joined to destroy all the terrible Nazi’s but was rejected for his old age. From that he showed how selfless he was to volunteer to fight for his country, Poland. But the biggest thing he ever done to show how much selfless he is for how he wanted to give up his life for Jewish children at the Orphanage that he worked at. The children were going to be poisoned by the horrid Nazis but he was not going to be killed he was going to be a doctor for the Nazi’s but he refused and wanted to give his life up for 192 Jewish children, to go and be poisoned in Treblinka with them.

Janusz Korczak shows his compassion for the 192 Jewish children who he helped in the Orphanage was by giving the Jewish children a newspaper page that was published in the Poland-Jewish Newspaper, and there own radio station the was cancelled after three years from complaints, but the biggest thing he did was going down with Jewish Children. Many others wouldn't do anything they would just run and hide, as for Janusz Korczak he was given the chance to live for being a doctor and help the Nazi’s but for what they were doing to all the Jewish young in the Orphanage and to all the Jewish people around the world.

anusz Korczak was a Jewish man that would never want to work for all the Nazis. I think that Janusz Korczak was a great man a courage's a selfless a compassionate and a reliable man. To wanting to go to war against all the Nazi’s but was not allowed for his age and then having a Orphanage with 192 Jewish children who were going to be killed in Treblinka and he wanted to die with them.
For how he would give up his life for a really hard time for the Jewish people would rather want to die then live. From how he did that Korczak shows to me as a hero only to the 192 Jewish children but a huge Idol to Jewish people and to people around the world.

Janusz Korczak shows how reliable he is by his honesty kindness and respect to all the Jewish people in the Orphanage and to all Jewish people everywhere. Janusz Korczak was given a chance to leave the Orphanage many years before the Nazis came be he refused but when they did come he refused to abandoned the children and last a Jewish police men was helping the Nazis but when he saw Korczak’s face he noticed who he was and was offering the chance to abandon the children but he did not take the chance of leaving them and after that no one heard anything else from him.

Korczak a Doctor a Writer a Educator and a Man that helps Jewish Young in a Orphanage was shown as a big hero. A hero to Jewish people a hero shown to Many people around the world. Korczak lived his life in Poland from birth to death 1878 to 1942, Korczak lived for 64 years until the Nazis destroyed everything that he got what the Jewish children got and what all Jewish people got. Korczak wanted to join the polish army to help destroy the Nazi’s but was not allowed for his age so instead he helped the Jewish children. Korczak was taken really seriously and from what he did he was a Jewish hero and a Poland hero and a hero to many people.

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