Human drama knows no boundaries. Sometimes it unfolds next to us; on other occasions, it takes place in forgotten parts of the world, i.e. the tragic fate of children jailed in a Nepalese prison, bodies of refugees washed up on a Greek beach, or a Polish mother who is carrying a child in her womb and suffering from a deadly form of cancer at the same time. We must see it so that human suffering will no longer be anonymous. Let’s watch TV and embark with Dominika Kulczyk on a journey to change the lives of those people for better.
Sharing what we have and the philosophy of smart social investments. How do you balance emotions and reason? This question is answered in the new issue of BR& magazine by Kulczyk Foundation Managing Director Marta Schmude-Olczak.
Goodbye, Father. We will continue to pilgrimage to Lednica to see God and you. Father Jan Góra, the man who greeted us in Lednica when we approached the Fish Gate, died yesterday.
There were no interruptions. No one was bored. There was no time. “Imagine a big housing estate in Poznań, the whole population of Zakopane, or a few dozen trains filled with people. 30,000 – that’s how many homeless people there are in Poland.” This is how teacher Tomasz Sadowski demonstrated what it was all about. And it was all about understanding, feeling, and wanting to do something about excluded populations. Even by teenagers. The Kulczyk Foundation’s The Domino Effect Global Education program provides such an opportunity. A recording of the class will soon be available for all teachers in Poland.