IMAGINE
"I'm a little scared, but I know it will get better, and we'll be happy again." Liad
IMAGINE
"I don't know what I feel" Yehuda wrote, next to a drawing of a large face painted blue.
During this challenging and difficult period, I sought refuge in the wisdom and innocence of children - there, I found comfort. "Sometimes I'm happy, a little angry, and a little sad," she said, as she drew smiling faces with rainbows on their backs.
Children’s paintings rise in scale - hearts and balloons, stars and moons, flowers and trees, houses and people. The genius of innocence spreads across huge walls, allowing us, the responsible adults , a perspective on another way of life. How will we live when the world is run by children?
Nine walls of the Babylon Jewish Museum are painted with children's optimistic messages. Collaborating with graffiti artists, the illustrations are enlarged as an act of protest and unity, of aspiration and hope.
Imagine.