The Teacher of Warsaw Quotes
The Teacher of Warsaw: A WWII Novel
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Mario Escobar4,311 ratings, 4.13 average rating, 529 reviews
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The Teacher of Warsaw Quotes
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“My dear doctor, evil is not from the outside; it nests deep in our hearts. The sooner we learn that truth, the easier it will be to put an end to it. Each of us has to be transformed into something better so the world can become a place worth living in.” “It certainly seems that good keeps quiet while evil is what makes history march along. But I am confident, Father, that in the end good will triumph.” The priest wrapped me in his arms. There we were, an old Jew and an old Catholic, embracing”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“can tell you one thing: conscience can be manipulated. At one time, as you well know, I was anti-Semitic. I told myself that the Jews did not deserve my compassion. God put me in this ghetto to mend my ways and show me how to pay for my faults.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“Sometimes I wonder, Janusz: What makes one man choose the light and another choose the dark?” I often wondered the same. “Conscience, perhaps? That inner voice that tells a man what’s good and what’s bad?”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“perverse?” “I think the Nazis are simply human, too human in the worst sense of the word. Your people were scared and had an inferiority complex; you didn’t know where to turn, and somebody rose up and told you what to do. By the time you thought about it, he had absolute control of your lives. Fear is the most dangerous weapon in the”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“doctor, evil is not from the outside; it nests deep in our hearts. The sooner we learn that truth, the easier it will be to put an end to it. Each of us has to be transformed into something better so the world can become a place worth living in.” “It certainly seems that good keeps quiet while evil is what makes history march along. But I am confident, Father, that in the end good will triumph.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“Korczak’s actual diary is short and encompasses only a few months of 1942. While several passages from it served as inspiration, The Teacher of Warsaw is a work of fiction. It is based on the direct or indirect testimony of Korczak himself and people who knew him.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“The last violin notes rang in my mind’s ears. I closed my eyes and beheld the face of the Teacher, the Old Doctor, my friend. I vowed to keep his memory alive and share the treasure of his wisdom so that everyone could know that good does triumph over evil.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“I sat at my desk and wrote for just a few moments. They were my last words. What else could be said? The children were waiting. Perhaps Jesus’s words about becoming like a child were the secret for saving a world that had gone up in flames.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“Most would be forced to leave the ghetto on the trains, and those who stayed a little longer would only be postponing the inevitable. It is hard to be born and learn how to die. We are never prepared to abandon this world.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“The poor child Amal was so hopeful about getting a letter from the king—and I, so hopeful for a word that would free us all from our terrible horror, from the interminable nightmare. I thought about the cemetery where my parents lay. They, too, had flowers over their chests for when they awoke. One day the King would come to see them. He would raise us all up out of our beds, and we would celebrate together with the biggest party in the world. I longed for that with all my heart. It was the only thing left to hope for. Chapter 40”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“I felt weak, but I mustered the strength to continue the ceremony and said, “Our work as educators is to cultivate love for human beings, for justice, truth, and hard work. Love is the foundation of everything we are. We are born in love, our mothers and fathers raise us by love, we learn how to love, and this shapes us into true human beings. Justice is what allows us to live together. Justice is our defense against the evil actions of others. Truth is like a torch that guides us through dark nights and one day will defeat all the shadows. We work together as one for food, but above all for unity. The forces of hatred will never break our spirits. May God keep us all.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“We the children, with God’s help, want to be happy, and we know that the only way to be happy is to also secure the happiness of those around”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“The Judenrat estimated that nearly one hundred thousand people had died since the ghetto had been established, most of starvation and disease. Those of us who were left knew that most would not make it through another winter. We were too weak to survive the cold again.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“the strength of love—more powerful than any force on earth—coursed through my body. Evil was driven back for those moments, and we brushed against something like happiness.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“I wondered how it was possible for two people to want to get married in our present circumstances, but that is, after all, what life is about. We must keep believing, fighting, and celebrating. The day we stop, we are as good as dead. Love is the strongest antidote to despair.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“If people outside the ghetto could see us, they’d think we’re the unluckiest people in the world. They may be right, but what matters is how we see ourselves. The way we see ourselves is the way everyone else will end up seeing us.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“One more day. I did not need to wear myself out; each day had enough trouble of its own. Today was unique and would never happen again.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“I thought of the hundreds of children I had tried to save over the years. Many of them were now dying because of the ghetto’s harsh conditions, but the work had still been worth the effort. After all, what is existence? Hardly a minute of infinity; we are like shadows God has entrusted with a flame that will never go out.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“The poor orphans needed much more than food and clothes. Their souls were so withered and numb that a simple smile or a story read aloud softly lit up their faces and improved their health as much as ghetto existence allowed.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“Reading is liberating. All throughout my youth, and the two times I’ve been in prison, I devoured books like the world was ending and each page turned would bring me closer to freedom.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“three very different, and yet ironically similar, men. Marek, Captain Neumann, and Father Godlewski were each trying to do good in their own way. One was a desperate freedom fighter; another clung to the last vestiges of his humanity; and the last was paying for the sins of his past. Godlewski’s was a heavy burden, that of admitting he had been wrong while he had tried to do what was right.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“My dear doctor, evil is not from the outside; it nests deep in our hearts. The sooner we learn that truth, the easier it will be to put an end to it. Each of us has to be transformed into something better so the world can become a place worth living in.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“One never gets used to living in the midst of pure evil.” “The day we do will be the death of us, at least of our souls.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“Now I was a Jew, an admirer of Jesus, a cursed Pole, a sick doctor, and a pedagogue in hell. I had finally discovered who I really was.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“always wondered how the Israelites reacted when Moses showed up. Maybe he forced them to be free. A people group that has lived enslaved for some time no longer knows how to live in freedom.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“Anyone could have money, and many people would amass large fortunes, but I had two hundred children whom I loved and who loved me. I was undoubtedly the richest man in the Warsaw ghetto.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“Love nourishes their souls. People without love are already dead, though they don’t yet know it.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“The poor do not have the luxury of pride if they want to feed their children, and I had over two hundred of them.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“A man is more than his inheritance, and the greatest legacy we can give our children is our love.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
“We were all equally poor, miserable, and desperate. Perhaps for the first time in history, money, class, and family background did not matter. We were a people united by misfortune and destined to demise.”
― The Teacher of Warsaw
― The Teacher of Warsaw
