The
Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom is a compelling non-fiction narrative of a
family of unlikely resistance fighters in the Netherlands during World War
II. Corrie was a fifty
something
year old watchmaker working with her father in their century year old family
business. She lived together with her
father and older sister in the building that housed their business. Their family includes a brother that is a
Dutch Reformed Church pastor that runs a home for the elderly with his family,
and a sister who has an entire family helping to hide Jewish people.
Father,
Betsie and Corrie want to help out when they see that their Jewish friends and
neighbors are being persecuted by the Nazis.
Corrie becomes the neighborhood leader in the resistance movement. Through the network, various “Mr. Smit’s”
arrive at their home and help them to build a secret room and install a buzzer
system to warn the tenants when they need to hide. Corrie mostly helps Jewish people find other
homes, but they keep people in their home that no one else will take as they
are too hard to hide for various reasons.
It becomes an open secret in their town that the Ten Boom’s are helping
Jewish people. It was only a matter of
time before their secret was out and the Gestapo came for them. Although Corrie was sick at the time, all of
the Jewish residents were able to hide.
The Ten Boom’s were taken away, but luckily the people hidden in their
home were able to escape later and all except one survived the war.
As
the family is taken away, the Gestapo chief says he will allow Father’s freedom
if he promises not to cause trouble, but Father answers, “If I go home today,
tomorrow I will open my door again to any man in need who knocks.” This is a death sentence for Father.
The
Ten Booms were a truly Christian family that lived by their faith. This had problems at times such as when they
wouldn’t lie, but always told the truth even when they were hiding Jewish
people from the Nazis or when Father said his line to the Gestapo. Their faith allowed them to help people in
need even though they knew it could cause, personal devastation to their
family. I only hope that if I were put
in such a situation, that I could be so good.
Betsie
and Corrie’s faith keeps them going as they are moved from a work camp in the
Netherlands to Ravensbruck Concentration camp in Germany after D-Day. They live in inhumane conditions, but their
faith and the power of trying to be positive keeps them going. My favorite was when Corrie couldn’t take it
that they had fleas in their living quarters, but Betsie said God but them
there for a reason. Corrie was not happy
with Betsie’s thought, but later on they are able to have privacy because the
guards will not come into the barracks because of the fleas.
I
have never read about Christians in concentration camps, although I knew that
the Nazi’s put a variety of people besides Jewish people in concentration camps
including, but not limited to, people working with the resistance or hiding
Jewish people, homosexuals, handicapped people, Communists, and gypsies. It inspired me to hear of their secret prayer
meetings where Catholics, Lutherans and Dutch Reformed women prayed together
and read from their hidden Bible.
This
book is the May selection for the Rogue (aka FLICKS) Book and Movie Club. It should provide interesting discussion at
book club tomorrow. This is a different
type of book (non-fiction and includes a lot of talk about faith) than we
typically read, but it was an inspiring book and fits into our love of World
War II historical fiction.
I
will admit that a lot of items in this book hit too close to home with the
descriptions of the treatment of people based on their ethnicity and the blind
following of a leader. I had to keep
reminding myself that it was written in the 1970s and was a true account of the
1930s and 1940s and not a description of current events.
Overall,
The Hiding Place is a book that everyone should read to get a true
understanding of not only World War II from the civilian side, but also what it
means to be human and to help out your fellow human being even if it causes
great personal sacrifice. If the world
had more people like the Ten Boom’s – we’d be in a much better place.
Book
Source: Kewaunee Pubic Library
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