Beautiful conversation. Reminded me of Janusz Korczak, a Polish Jewish educator and children's books writer. He ran an orphanage for children in Warsaw. When the Germans came in 1942 to collect his 192 children to be taken to Treblinka, an extermination camp , he was offered a way out but he stayed with the children saying he could not abandon them. Wikipedia reports on this particular scene when this was happening: "According to eyewitnesses, when the group of orphans finally reached the Umschlagplatz, an SS officer recognized Korczak as the author of one of his favorite children's books and offered to help him escape." Imagine: a German soldier offering a Jewish man an escape due to their common love for children and books. Across the divide and in spite of cruelty surrounding them, even if for just one moment, they found each other. The humanity of this scene is both raw and endearing to the core. Much of what Daryl was saying about searching for the humanity of the other, inside the KKK and elsewhere, strikes the same chord for me.
Daryl appeared on a podcast called "Timcast" a while ago and revealed himself to be deeply racist. Telling hosts he "knew what they were about" that they "didn't get it because they were white" and repeated phrases like "I can tell just by looking at ya!" The host is half Korean, but Daryl simply called him "White"
Beautiful conversation.
Reminded me of Janusz Korczak, a Polish Jewish educator and children's books writer. He ran an orphanage for children in Warsaw. When the Germans came in 1942 to collect his 192 children to be taken to Treblinka, an extermination camp , he was offered a way out but he stayed with the children saying he could not abandon them.
Wikipedia reports on this particular scene when this was happening:
"According to eyewitnesses, when the group of orphans finally reached the Umschlagplatz, an SS officer recognized Korczak as the author of one of his favorite children's books and offered to help him escape."
Imagine: a German soldier offering a Jewish man an escape due to their common love for children and books. Across the divide and in spite of cruelty surrounding them, even if for just one moment, they found each other. The humanity of this scene is both raw and endearing to the core.
Much of what Daryl was saying about searching for the humanity of the other, inside the KKK and elsewhere, strikes the same chord for me.
@kamiltrzebiatowski9331 you know he himself is a racist right? Watch his appearance on Timcast irl.
Daryl appeared on a podcast called "Timcast" a while ago and revealed himself to be deeply racist.
Telling hosts he "knew what they were about" that they "didn't get it because they were white" and repeated phrases like "I can tell just by looking at ya!"
The host is half Korean, but Daryl simply called him "White"
Is there no video for this podcast this week?
Unfortunately not! We did film the reflection which you can watch here: ruclips.net/video/aRPaPSHxXC8/видео.html
@ ok, thanks for this ☺️ will listen on my walk then
@@julesb1421 Let us know what you think when you finish it!
Oooooh, this will be so good! Will listen tonight. Have heard of Daryl before.
@@kamiltrzebiatowski9331 Let us know what you think when you get round to it!
Big difference between empathy and sympathy. All the difference.
What is the difference?