The Ten Booms “As each has received a gift, use it to serve others, as stewards of God’s various grace.” 1 Peter 4:10. Everyone agrees that it was risky, but some people believe that the Ten Boom family should have hidden the Jews and some believe that the Ten Boom family should not have hidden the Jews. The Ten Boom family should have hidden the Jews for three reasons. It was the right thing to do, God told them to, and they enjoyed company.
The first reason the Ten Boom family should have hidden the Jews is it was the right thing to do. The Nazi’s persecuting the Jews is wrong so someone has to help them. The Jews do not deserve to die just because their belief. They had plenty of room for them in their gigantic house. Their home was
Corrie Ten Boom’s astonishing novel, “The Hiding Place”, is an extraordinary adventure of one courageous Christian woman who had been sent to a concentration camp, along with her sister, for helping the Jews. Both the girls depended heavily on Christ’s power and words to guide
Yesterday, eight Jews in hiding were found and arrested by German and Dutch police. The people captured were Otto Frank, Hermann van Pels, Fritz Pfeffer, Peter van Pels, Edith Frank, Auguste van Pels, Margot Frank, and Anne Frank.
Jews have perished because of their beliefs since the beginning of time but never have so many Jews been persecuted worldwide as they were in World War II. Anne Frank’s diary reaches a place within all of our hearts because it reminds us how easily the innocents can suffer. Sometimes we may choose to close our eyes or look the other way when unjustifiable things happen in our society and Anne’s tale reminds us that ignorance, in part, claimed her life. Sadly, her story is but one of many of those who died in the Holocaust and as with other Jews, her fate was determined by the country she lived in, her sex and her age.
Corrie ten Boom grew up in a strong, Christian home. Religion played a huge role in her life. Her family was always assisting anyone who needed help. Whether it was taking in foster kids, giving money to those who needed it or offering food and shelter to Jews during World War II, her family was always offering to help people in need. The ten Boom family took in over eight hundred Jews, attempting to save them from the Gestapo. The ten Boom’s were very brave and stood up for what they believed in, even if it meant getting caught and taken to concentration camps.
Corrie’s family had great beliefs in Christianity and felt that they were called to help the Jews in every way possible. So she ended up participating in a black market for ration cards that were stolen but in which they needed to help the Jews. This then led her to end up hiding Jews in her own home. She knew that her family would probably not get away with helping the Jews as they had no place to put them. Corrie was then later met by a man who had asked Corrie to help him with his wife who had been arrested she agreed to help but unknowingly the man was a Nazi undercover and the watch shop was raided and the whole Ten Boom family was arrested . The Jews were back at the house in a secret room. Corrie was then sent to a Dutch prison where she stayed in a cell in which it was very cold in the mists of night and in which you couldn’t communicate with anyone and the Nazi officers would not let you lay down. She then later found out that Betsie was in a different cell but didn’t know exactly which one because of the lack of communication. Corrie wasn’t so worried about her sister she was much more worried about her dad Casper Ten
Eleanor Roosevelt once said “You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, 'I lived through this horror. I can take the next thing that comes along. '” <Brainyquote.com> Throughout the novel the Hubermanns demonstrate tremendous courage. Like what Eleanor Roosevelt says, the Hubermanns really did look fear right in the face. One example of this is, they allowed a Jew to hide in their home, going directly against the law and belief of Nazi Germany despite the harsh consequences that could be waiting for them (Zusak 173). The family all cared for the Jews, and put their
While reading The Hiding Place, I was frequently inspired by the power and insight behind Corrie ten Boom’s words. However, two of her statements particularly stood out to me. The first was when she had said “Some knowledge is too heavy... you cannot bear it...your father will carry it until you are able.” (ten Boom 175) This phrase is so meaningful because it was a lesson she had learned from her own father when she was young, but now she uses it in her own teaching and relates it to her heavenly father as well. The second quote that stood out to me was when she had said “His will is our hiding place. Lord Jesus, keep me in Your will.” (ten Boom 234) This statement refers to Corrie’s realization of how everything had happened for a reason. This was her protection or “hiding place” through the horrors of the concentration camp and her personal losses. I found these two quotes to be the most perceptive phrases of Corrie’s that spoke to me the most.
It's so alarming that I can't even picture what it must have been like! Even with the Jews personal items being taken, their life-sustaining needs were hardly provided for them by the Nazis. It was pure torture what the did to these people and is under no circumstances justified in any case.
Also included were the host families themselves, who took the frightened children into their homes and showered them with affection, love, and patience. Tens of thousands of children survived the Holocaust by living under new identities for lengthy periods of time with adoptive parents, or in institutions, such as religious orphanages, many of these stories also appeared in the Hidden Child bulletins over the years. In the Eastern side of Europe “the Germans executed not only the people who sheltered Jews, but their entire family as well” (The Holocaust). Western Europe was much more lenient, but many of the righteous individuals were incarcerated in camps or murdered randomly here too. Anyone who assisted in helping Jews “lived under constant fear of being caught; there was always the danger of denunciation by neighbors or collaborators” (The Holocaust). Jews were hidden in rescuers’ homes and property, they were provided false papers and identities, and were smuggled out of ghettos and concentration camps. As the entire race of Jews was being destroyed, a trace of hope and strength arose as the Righteous Gentiles sheltered Jews from the whole world that was against them.
The first reason the tenBooms should have hidden the Jews was The Germans. The tenBooms were compassionate, Christian people, and they felt horribly helpless as they watched the Germans hurt and break the spirits of normally joyful people. People were disappearing faster than you could say “Those rotten Germans!” and the tenBoom family knew they needed to help. The soldiers
During the Holocaust many Jews were hidden in fear. Force to live together and make a living. There was no discrimination of age of Jews. Jews old and young alike were persecuted. Like the three teens named Margot Frank, Anne Frank, and Peter Van Daan. These teens have
Anne Frank and her family along with a few friends all had to stay in an annex that never gave anyone their own space. Her family fled their home to stay in the annex so they wouldn’t be sent off to be killed, tortured, or put to work. She stayed there for over two silent years always being short or food and sleep. All because they believed a certain religion. Because they didn’t have the “perfect” blue eyes and blonde eyes. Germans were brainwashed into thinking that the Jews were wrong for believing a certain god, but the Germans were right for killing them for it?
Despite their efforts, the ten Boom family was captured and taken to concentration camps, although the Jews in the house were not found. Casper, Corrie’s father, died ten days later, and Nollie was released eventually, but Betsie and Corrie stayed imprisoned. Unfortunately, they were subjected to horrific conditions, and they witnessed the deaths of many innocent people. For many people, the concentration camp would have been the end of their work, but for Corrie and Betsie the months they spent in Ravensbrück became "their finest hour." Corrie described how she struggled with and overcame the hate that she had for the man who betrayed her family. Holding secret worship services, Corrie and Betsie were able to comfort the inmates and share the love of Christ. Although Betsie eventually died of sickness, Corrie was able to continue her legacy within the concentration camps and beyond, in her ministry.
In Night there are several examples of selfishness to protect themselves. As the jews were being prosecuted there were many families that took jews in to hide them. However there were many who turned a blind eye and began to help
There was a selection process that would wee out the “useless” Jewish people to have them burned to death in a pit.