b'Lot 96 Lot 9796(HOLOCAUST). Janusz Korczak: Prawo Dziecka do Szacunku [The Childs Right to Respect.]FIRST EDITION.pp. 43, (5). Browned. Original printed wrappers. 8vo. Warsaw, Naukowa, 1929. $1000 - $1500 Janusz Korzcak (pen name of Henryk Goldszmit, 1878-1942) was a Polish-Jewish educator and pediatrician. After spending many years working as director of an orphanage in Warsaw, he refused sanctuary and stayed with his orphans when the entire population of the institution was sent by the Nazis from the Ghetto to the Treblinka extermination camp, during the Grossaktion Warshau of 1942. This moment exemplied his educational philosophy, embodied in this important work: The Childs Right to Respect, Korzcaks most widely published and respected works. In it, he advocates for the rights of children not as human beings in potentia, but as human beings with the same rights as the adults who raise them. Further, he criticizes those adults who would scold children while they also commit the same errors: We hide our own faults and guilty actions.We pose as being perfect. [Yet] only the child may be shamelessly degraded and placed in a pillory.97(HOLOCAUST). Die Greuelpropaganda ist eine LugenpropagandaAtrocity Propaganda is Based on Lies, Say the Jews of Germany Themselves.FIRST EDITION.Text in German, English, French. pp. 142. Original printed boards, lightly stained. 4to.Berlin, Jakow Trachtenberg, 1933. $400 - $600 This Orwellian volume contains letters from eminent German-Jewish leaders denouncing the propaganda campaign against Nazi Germany that was initiated overseas and denies the existence of anti-Jewish persecution or bias under the new regime in Germany. To lend it credibility, the book was published at the Jewish press of Jakow Trachtenberg in Charlottenberg, the Jewish district of Berlin, yet bears the imprimatur of Nazi potentate Walter Schauer. See Y. Arad, Y. Gutman, A. Margaliot (editors) Documents on the Holocaust, Selected Sources on the Destruction of the Jews of Germany and Austria, Poland, and the Soviet Union, Yad Vashem, 1981, Document 22, pp. 59-64.49'