- Caption
- Three little girls dry their hands on towels hanging on hooks in the Petit Monde children's home.
- Photographer
- Walter Limot/ Photo Limot
- Date
-
Circa 1945 - 1950
- Locale
- Meudon-Bellevue, [Hauts-de-Seine] France
- Photo Credit
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Andre Limot
- Event History
- Le Petit Monde, also known as Melbourne House, was an OSE (Oeuvre de Secours aux Enfants) children's home in Paris, which sheltered some 30-35 Jewish pre-school children, ages 2-6. These children had been recovered from the homes of French families, where they had been hidden during the war. The home was established and directed by Simone Weil, who had trained as an early childhood educator in Strasbourg before the war, and had been active in the wartime French-Jewish underground. Adopting the Montessori educational approach she studied in Strasbourg, Weil organized the orphans at Le Petit Monde into small family units consisting of children of various ages. Each group was headed by an early childhood educator-in-training. Le Petit Monde operated for approximately two years before all the children were placed with families in France or emigrated abroad.