SYNOPSIS
“One of the Miracles” is the personal story of Inge
Meyring Smith, an innovator of modern-day education who
has had an influence on the lives of thousands of
children over a 60-year career.
During the Holocaust, her
upper-class Jewish family barely escaped the
concentration camps as they fled Germany. In New York
as a teen, living in poverty and able to read only in
German, Inge completed the education from which she had
been deprived in Nazi Germany. She worked on Wall
Street, married an American soldier, moved to Tennessee,
started a kindergarten, and eventually enrolled in
Vanderbilt’s prestigious Peabody College. After
earning her Masters degree, Inge served in the
Appalachians and Mississippi on the forefront of John F.
Kennedy’s War on Poverty by helping to develop President
Johnson's nascent national Head Start program where her life was
threatened several times for bringing food and the love
of learning to impoverished Mississippi Blacks.
In the midst of Head
Start, Inge was given the opportunity to create a
private elementary school that would eventually serve as
a role model for several independent schools throughout
the U.S. and Europe. With the motto, “Teach the child,
not the subject,” she developed a reputation as an
innovator and, through her efforts via independent
school associations, untold thousands of children found
an education and desire to learn that they otherwise
might not have experienced.
As she approaches her
late-80s, Inge hasn’t slowed. She gives frequent
lectures, travels extensively, and continues to operate
the preschool that she started over 60 years ago with
the philosophy that each child is a gift from God, the
value of which is not determined by race or social
privilege, but by opportunity, which she feels is a
basic right for all children throughout the globe.
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