08/28/2025
In 1944, inside the Łódź Ghetto in Poland, hunger had become a constant, merciless companion. Children scavenged for scraps, often sifting through trash for potato peels or anything edible. One day, a young boy stumbled upon a single apple core — a tiny, almost insignificant remnant of life beyond the ghetto walls.
Instead of keeping it for himself, he carefully divided it among three friends. They licked the scraps together, savoring every bit, but more than the taste, they cherished the shared moment. In their laughter and imagined feasts, the harsh reality of starvation was briefly softened. For a fleeting instant, the ghetto rang with the sound of children’s voices, echoing hope, camaraderie, and imagination in a place designed to strip them of joy.
In this small act of generosity, they preserved a fragment of childhood, asserting humanity against the cruelty surrounding them. The apple core became a symbol of resilience — proof that even in deprivation, kindness, sharing, and laughter could survive. Through their unity, the children created a fleeting sanctuary of memory and imagination, holding onto life and spirit in a world bent on erasing both.